Steroids are lipids. Lipids are organic soluble, instead of water soluble. Their basic structure is that of the steroid ring: four linked rings of carbon.
hydrocarbons are not soluble in a polar solvent but are soluble in a non-polar solvent.
Lipids are fat soluble compounds found in plants and animals. The body uses lipids for energy storage, absorbing fat-soluble vitamins and chemical messaging.
carbon disulphide
Lipoproteins are soluble in lipids; plasma is a suspension in blood.
Lipids are soluble in nonpolar or organic solvents.
Lipids (fat-soluble), they can therefore be administered orally.
The answer will depend on what the solvent is.
A substance which can dissolve in a solvent is said to be soluble in that solvent
Lipids are soluble in Bloor's regent (Ethanol and Diethyl ether in 1:2 molar ratio).
Lipids are soluble in non-polar solvents
Lipids tend to be hydrophobic, that is they "fear" water. they are soluble in oil or non-polar solvents
If the solid is soluble in that particular solvent, yes you will get a solution.
is baking soda a solvent
No
Steroids are lipids. Lipids are organic soluble, instead of water soluble. Their basic structure is that of the steroid ring: four linked rings of carbon.
hydrocarbons are not soluble in a polar solvent but are soluble in a non-polar solvent.