Body soaps would all be similar in action against most germs. Some may work better on some kinds of germs than others, but not significantly different. The most important parts in the hand washing equation are the technique and duration, by far more important than the type of soap used. The friction of the physical rubbing of the hands and the water rinsing oils and dirt away (and with them most of the germs of various types) is what washing hands is best at and what makes it an important step in disease prevention. See the related questions below for additional details.
tide or gain
Yes, it kills most germs.
It kills most of the germs in the pool.
Most soaps don't directly kill germs. They dissolve oils and dirt and loosen them from your skin so they can be washed down the drain, and with them go the germs. That is, if you wash your hands correctly. See the related question below for proper technique.
The part of the blood that kills germs are the white cells.
Fact states that normal soaps are already antibacterial, but you see, this is just a marketing tool to lure customers into buying their product instead of regular soap.
it doesn't specifically kill 99.99 or 99% of germs but it helps us lot it kills our germs about 55% germs it just say it kills 99.99% germs so people can buy it lot and the shopkeeper will make lot of money or the company man
Yes, Vinegar is very strong! Its like acid, it kills most germs! No lie
The reason why the plant die is: The plant may die when you put soap in the plant because soap kills germs, aphids and other pest. If you put large amounts of soaps the chemically will burns the leaves.
A sanitiser cleans and kills germs.
Yes, the heat definitely kills germs.
Soap kills 79% of germs off of your hands.
I know for sure hot water kills germs