It would depend on which alcohol you mean.
The property described by alcohol boiling at 60 degrees C is the boiling point.
Because the boiling point of alcohol is lower than the boiling point of water.
A given form of liquid alcohol will turn to vapor at its boiling point, which is different for each type of alcohol.
The boiling point for alcohol depends on the type of alcohol. For ethanol or grain alcohol it is 173.1 F and for isopropyl alcohol 177 F.
Alcohol is almost every substance that has OH group. [of course except acids and carbohydrates, but that's not the point]. So the boiling point will be different according to length of carbon chain. For example methanol has a boiling point around 60 degrees Celsius. Ethanol [alcohol which is in beer wine and all other alcohol drinks] has a boiling point somewhere around 80 degrees Celsius. For other alcohols you should try some organic chemistry books
The boiling point of methyl alcohol (methanol) is 64.7oC.
Ethyl alcohol, also known as ethanol, has a boiling point of 78.37
The boiling point of alcohol is 173F/78C. Similarly the boiling point of pure water is 212F/100C. Hence the mixing of water and alcohol will have a boiling point that lies between these two ratios.
Any form of liquid alcohol will change to vapor when its temperature reaches the boiling point (different for each type of alcohol).Alcohol (ethyl alcohol) is a volatile liquid and changes in to vapours at every temperature although its boiling point is 78.5 Celsius.
Phenol has a higher boiling point than alcohol does; it has a stronger dipole difference in its -OH group.
Rubbing alcohol's boiling point is exactly 190F, 87.78 C
The pure ethanol has the boiling point 78.5 celsius while water has 100 celsius so when water is added to ethanol its boiling point becomes increased.