Heavy water
Yes, but why?
no clean water to drink,bathe,brush teeth and so on .you must prevent this from happening
no! if anything it is most dangerous. laundry detergent has some pretty irritating chemicals that can strip and harm your skin.
Of course it is. remember that after you bathe, you will dry yourself with a towel that was washed in laundry detergent, and sleep in sheets, and put on clothes all washed with laundry detergent. Laundry detergent does not have the moisturizers that are in most bubble bath soaps, but so what. Have you ever heard of anyone getting sick from a bath? But then don't drink it, or put it in your eyes...like any other soap.
Take normal sugar and add it to boiling water. Add as much as the water will hold. Put a string or thin stick in the mixture and let it cool and set for many days. The resulting crystals are an example of how nature makes crystals over much longer timescales. If you want a bigger crystal, repeat the experiment while letting the string or stick from the previous experiment bathe in the mixture.
The first working nuclear reactor was built at the University of Chicago. This was the Chicago Pile-1 (CP-1), and you can find a link below that will bathe you in information.
The present tense of "bathe" is "bathing" - still pronounced with a long A as in bathe.
The verb of bath is bathe. As in "to bathe somewhere" or "to bathe in something".
"I will bathe".
Bathe is correct.
You can bathe a dog anytime.
I bathe mines in the sink if its bigger then 5 inches then bathe it in the bath tub.
The past tense of "bathe" is "bathed."
The correct term is "bathe someone." "Bath" is typically used as a noun referring to a container for washing or the act of washing oneself.
That is the correct spelling of "bathed" (past tense of to bathe, to wash).
Bathe is the verb, bath is the noun. "I am going to bathe." "I am going to take a bath."
Giraffes have never been seen to bathe.