They form a heterogenous L-in-L mixture called: emulsion.
Example: salad dressing, whipped cream
lemon juice and water The two liquids in a lava lamp.
An example of a mixture of insoluble liquid and liquid is oil and water. When oil and water are combined, they do not mix together and form separate layers due to their different polarities. This type of mixture is called an emulsion.
The denser a liquid is the farther down in will be if mixed with other liquids. For example, if you mix oil and water the water will fall to the bottom while the oil will float to the top because oil is less dense when compared to water.
No. Several liquids, including gasoline, oil and alcohol, are less dense.
I think what you meant was immiscible liquids. Immiscible liquid mean that it cannot form a homgeneous mixture when they are mixed together. A good example o f this is water are oil. The oil sits on top of the water.
An example of a polar liquid is water, while an example of a non-polar liquid is oil. A strong electrolyte commonly found in a household is table salt (sodium chloride). An example of an emulsion found at home is salad dressing, which is a mixture of oil and vinegar.
An example of a solid to a liquid is ice melting into water.
juice and water
Emulsion is a mixture of two or more immiscible liquid (liquids which do not mix in other liquids), one is dispersed by the other. Example : water in oil - water is dispersed in oil ( medium)
a liquid is a thick fluid type of a substance.for example water,milk blood etc.. proper definition: a substance that flows freely but if of constant volume,having consistency like that of water and oil.
Oil
This depends on the type of liquid and type of object. A different density of either will affect the buoyancy of an object. For example, wood is less dense than water, so it floats on top. However, if there is a liquid less dense than wood, then the wood will sink in it.