Table salt.
You grind a bit of wood off the table and mix it with ordinary salt, voila you have table salt!
No, table salt (sodium chloride) is not basic, it is a neutral compound.
Table salt is a solid.
The solute in table salt is sodium chloride.
No, table salt (sodium chloride) is a result of an ionic bond, not a covalent bond. Ionic bonds are formed between a metal and a non-metal, while covalent bonds are formed between two non-metals, where they share electrons. Sodium chloride forms as a result of sodium (a metal) losing an electron to chlorine (a non-metal).
not usually salt acts as an acid when to much is consumed and will result in bloody noses and if happens to much will result in serious blood loss
Table salt is a salt - sodium chloride (NaCl).
Rock salt and table salt are both sodium chloride - NaCl; table salt is the pure form of rock salt.
no, table sugar and salt are compounds.
Table salt (sodium chloride) is a solid salt.
Table salt (sodium chloride) is a solid salt.
Table salt.
table salt Any difference; table salt, rock salt, sea salt are the same chemical compound - sodium chloride, NaCl.
Sodium Chloride is better known as table salt.
NaCl is commonly known as table salt - Na=Sodium Cl=Chloride
salt is the result of a chemical reaction between a metal and a ...(bugger, forgot the name. the stuff on the right side of the elemental chart). more specifically if you are reffering to table salt it is: NaCl