Respuesta :
Hmm. This is very unspecific but it could either be indicating the pH of the solution or just saying it is an aqeous solution.
"An acid is a substance that forms hydrogen ions when dissolved in water." this is an example of Arrhenius theory .
Explanation:
Any substance that, after ionisation, dissolves in liquid and produce hydrogen ions called Arrhenius acid (HCl, HCN,etc). Whereas, a substance that dissolves in aqueous releases hydroxide ions called Arrhenius base (NAOH, KOH, etc).
Arrhenius theory elaborates why acids have same properties: The internal properties of acids are determined by the presence of [tex]H^{+}[/tex] ions formed by dissolving acids in aqueous. These also explain why acid neutralises bases and vice versa. Acids give an [tex]H^{+}[/tex] ion and the bases give an [tex]O H^{-}[/tex] ions.
Example:
[tex]H C l \rightarrow H^{+}(a q)+C l^{-}(a q)[/tex]
Where, (aq) stands for aqueous which means in the presence of water that is, water acts as a solvent.