The water used for watering the lawn is a pure compound because it is composed of only water molecules (H2O) and not a mixture of different substances.
its a mixture, water as a pure form has no salt in it
Rain water is mixture, it is not a pure compound but contains dissolved gases and somtimes particulate matter.
Water is a pure compound -- all of it is one kind of molecule: H2O.
It's a compound. H2O - Two hydrogen atoms, one oxygen atom Water is a compound as it can be reduced to simpler elements (Oxygen and water).It is a homogenous mixture("the same") as it is uniform throughout. E.g: Salt and sand mixed together would be a heterogenous mixture("different") as you can distinguish between sand and salt. A pure 'mixture' is usually homogenous, especially liquids.
Pure water is a compound, not mixture.
Water is a compound, not a mixture.
It's a compound mixture because it's not pure water so isn't pure!
Pure water is a compound. it is not a mixture.
The water used for watering the lawn is a pure compound because it is composed of only water molecules (H2O) and not a mixture of different substances.
No. Pure water is a compound and therefore a pure substance
No, water is a pure substance. It is a compound.
its a mixture, water as a pure form has no salt in it
Pure water is a compound. It is composed of two elements, hydrogen and oxygen, chemically bonded together in a fixed ratio (H2O).
No, water is a pure substance, a compound: H2O, so it is no mixture at all!
Pure water vapor is a compound, just as liquid water is.
Rain water is mixture, it is not a pure compound but contains dissolved gases and somtimes particulate matter.