It is impossible to give a figure but it will be a lot lower as the polarity makes the molecules bond more tightly together. Remembering that H2S is a gas at room temperature (it is polar but not as much as water), I would imagine that water would be too but its boiling point would be even lower than H2S. However there are other factors affecting boiling point other than polarity.
yes
hydrogen bond bonds water molecules with other water molecules.
oxygen and hydrogen hydrogen carries positive charge while oxygen carries negative charge.
Substances with nonpolar molecules are not dissolved in water.
The intermolecular bonds between water molecules are hydrogen bonds.
No. It can't.
Molecules with many polar bonds are soluble in polar solvents.Also, molecules with none or few polar bonds (many non-polar bonds) are soluble in non-polar solvent. e.g Water is a polar solvent so substances with many polar bonds are soluble in it.
Polar molecules dissolve in water. The reason why polar molecules dissolve in water, but not non-polar molecules is because non-polar molecules can't form hydrogen bonds.
Hydrophobic molecules do not dissolve in water. This is because water is hydrophilic. Another way to say this is that lipids, which are nonpolar, cannot dissolve in water, which in polar.
Water is a universal solvent and can dissolve many substances, but it cannot dissolve non-polar substances like oil, grease, and some plastics. These substances do not have a charge and therefore do not interact well with water molecules.
yes
hydrogen bonds with the polar end of the phospholipid molecule
hydrogen bond bonds water molecules with other water molecules.
Lipid are nonpolar molecules that is not soluble in water.
oxygen and hydrogen hydrogen carries positive charge while oxygen carries negative charge.
water
Polar Molecules