To answer your question properly we need to define what type of soap you are referring to. I will answer assuming that you are referring to melt and pour soap.
Melt & Pour Soap
1. Heat - Stove top, microwave oven, placed in direct sunlight
2. Water - Soap placed in a spot where there are excessive water will dissolve the soap bar into the water, once the water dries out of the soap it will become partially solid depending on the amount of moisture in the soap
3. Alcohol - since alcohol is used in the soap making process and it is used to minimize bubbles after pouring into the mold it will have a "melting" effect on the soap, it could only be temporary
Cold Process Soap
1. Water - Soap bar placed in water will dissolve into the water, but may not return to a solid for a long time, it may remain mushy at best.
Soap is basically made up of fatty acids, when heated up in a microwave the fat simply melts just like butter would
Pams soap melts the fastest.
I have no clue
They're already melted if they are in the liquid state.
The Chocolate chip cookie dough ice cream does!
It isn't necessarily the brand of ice-cream, but the temperature it was stored at.
bathing time the soap melts when we burn paper when we cook when we burn wood when we burn food
dial
choclate
brown sugar
I have no clue
I have never tried to melt Irish Spring, but I have tried to melt Dove. When I tried to melt it, it became this huge bubbly thing. It did not melt at all.
I think it is Lindt.
Vodka is the fastest liquid ice cube melter. It also won't freeze until it is minus sixty degree out side.
they all melt at the same pace, none faster than the other green melts the fastest
Milk chocolate.
water. scientific fact.
glue
Water