I think ethanol.
Carbon tetrachloride can dissolve fat and oils.
The molecules which donot have polar centers donot dissolve in water as fat and oil,
Oils and fats dissolve in other fats and oils, as they are non-polar molecules. They do not dissolve in water, which is a polar molecule.
fat-solube is another name for lipophilicity a ability of a chemical compound to dissolve in fat,oils,lipids,and fat-solube non-polar solvents like hexane
No, butter will not dissolve in chloroform because chloroform is not a good solvent for non-polar compounds like fats and oils. Butter is mostly composed of fat and water, neither of which are soluble in chloroform.
Borax does not dissolve in oils as it is a water-soluble compound. Mixing borax with oils will result in the borax staying as solid particles separate from the oil phase.
Oils are fats in liquid form, chill an oil and you will find you have fat.
If by "perfume" you mean essential plant oils, then yes - oils dissolve in alcohol.
No sand does not dissole in fat.
Fat or more widely known as lipids is not soluble to water glucose is soluble in water.you need to be more specific as to what you think they migth be soluble in.
Lipids are fat molecules, like solid oils. They contain lots of carbon atoms, so they cannot dissolve because the molecules do not break apart in water.
There is fat in it