Yes
Sodium reacts violently with alcohol, producing flammable hydrogen gas and sodium alkoxide. This can result in a dangerous and explosive situation. It is not recommended to store sodium in alcohol.
Sodium chloride solubility in isopropyl alcohol is very low.
Ivory soap does not contain alcohol. It is made primarily of sodium tallowate, sodium cocoate, and/or sodium palm kernelate, along with water, fragrance, and salts.
Sodium chloride is insoluble in ethyl alcohol because the bonding between sodium and chloride ions in sodium chloride is very strong due to ionic attractions. Ethyl alcohol is a non-polar solvent, which cannot break these strong ionic bonds to dissolve sodium chloride.
I know for a fact that you can mix rubbing alcohol and water, as most rubbing alcohol is a water and isopropyl alcohol solution, but when you mix vinegar and backing soda a gas is produced, so it probably wouldn't mix that well.
No
2 Benzyl alcohol + 2 Na ---> H2(g) + 2 sodium benzoate
Sodium Chloride has a higher melting point because at room temperature it is a solid but Ethyl alcohol has already melted, as it is liquid.
Sodium hydroxide is not very soluble in rubbing alcohol (isopropyl alcohol). While rubbing alcohol can dissolve some polar substances like salts, it may not fully dissolve sodium hydroxide due to its strong ionic nature. It is better to dissolve sodium hydroxide in water for effective use.
when sodium react with ethanol ,ethoxide and hydrogen are formed. this reaction is like when sodium reacts with water
Of course, otherwise sodium violently reacts with water (moisture) present in alcohol.
The reaction of benzyl alcohol with sodium metal results in the formation of sodium benzoate through the oxidation of benzyl alcohol to benzoic acid and subsequent reaction with sodium hydroxide. The reaction of glycerol with sodium metal results in the formation of glycerol sodium alkoxide and hydrogen gas through a displacement reaction.