it contains high quantities of excriment and urine now shove that up ur pipe and smoke it
Vegetable oil is used to make natural soap, fossil oil contains raw material for synthetic soap, called detergents (laundry cleaning etc.)
yes used to made a soap
Yes because soap is water and oil interacting.
Antifungal soap is actually very easy to make. You will need jojoba oil, thymus vulgaris, white soap, tea tree oil, rose water, dried marigold petals, a cheese grater, and greaseproof paper. The process to make it includes mixing the ingredients, boiling certain parts, and stirring in other ingredients.
Rosin is most often used to make a mildly abrasive soap.
No, soap is not soluble in oil. Soap is hydrophilic, meaning it is soluble in water, but not in oils or other nonpolar substances.
Coconut is used in soap because of its hardness and moisturizing nature. It helps to make soap hard.
Soaps can be made form most oils but, to answer your question, it is possible to make soap from olive oil.
Soap must be used to clean oil off of something because water will not work.
To make soap from scratch requires treating an oil or fat with an alkali, such as lye. Oregano is an additive that can be added to the soap after the saponification process is complete.
In the Soap making process there is a number of oils mostly vegetable and Animal based, that is used in the soap making process, that would include Palm Kernel Oil, Almond Oil, Olive Oil etc.
palm oil.....
Strigils were scrapers. A person would be oiled up and then the strigil was used to scrape off the oil and dirt. The Romans used oil in place of our soap, although soap was known.
yes used to made a soap
I don't about ink but it is possible to make soap from peanuts. Just add sodium hydroxide to the oil extracted from peanuts, it will give soap.
oil and soap
The stirigil was a scraping tool. It could be likened to our washcloths. The ancients Romans used oil in place of soap and they scraped the oil (and dirt) off with the strigil.The stirigil was a scraping tool. It could be likened to our washcloths. The ancients Romans used oil in place of soap and they scraped the oil (and dirt) off with the strigil.The stirigil was a scraping tool. It could be likened to our washcloths. The ancients Romans used oil in place of soap and they scraped the oil (and dirt) off with the strigil.The stirigil was a scraping tool. It could be likened to our washcloths. The ancients Romans used oil in place of soap and they scraped the oil (and dirt) off with the strigil.The stirigil was a scraping tool. It could be likened to our washcloths. The ancients Romans used oil in place of soap and they scraped the oil (and dirt) off with the strigil.The stirigil was a scraping tool. It could be likened to our washcloths. The ancients Romans used oil in place of soap and they scraped the oil (and dirt) off with the strigil.The stirigil was a scraping tool. It could be likened to our washcloths. The ancients Romans used oil in place of soap and they scraped the oil (and dirt) off with the strigil.The stirigil was a scraping tool. It could be likened to our washcloths. The ancients Romans used oil in place of soap and they scraped the oil (and dirt) off with the strigil.The stirigil was a scraping tool. It could be likened to our washcloths. The ancients Romans used oil in place of soap and they scraped the oil (and dirt) off with the strigil.
Mainly to remove oil. It is also used to clean.