Answer:
Explanation:
Describing a solution as concentrated tells that the solution has a relative large concentration, but it is a qualitative description, not a quantitative one, so this does not tell really how concentrated the solution is. This is, the term concentrated is a kind of vague; it just lets you know that the solution is not very diluted, but, as said initially, that there is a relative large amount (concentration) of solute.
One conclusion, of course, is that the solute is soluble: else the solution were not concentrated.
On the other hand, the terms saturated and supersaturated to define a solution are specific.
A saturated solution has all the solute that certain amount of solvent can contain, at a given temperature. A supersaturated solution has more solute dissolved than the saturated solution at the same temperature; superstaturation is a very unstable condition.
From above, there is no way that you can conclude whether a solution is supersaturated or not from the statement that a solution is concentrated, so the answer is none of the above.