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Diffusion
Water molecules attract the opposite poles of other polar molecules through poles present in water itself.
hydrogen
Water is highly cohesive. Its molecules tend to resist increases in their motion. When water is heated, some of the energy is used to disturb the hydrogen bonds between neighboring molecules.
Soluble particles.
Diffusion
Actually, both are same. Both can form in liquid state at room temperature. Both alcohol molecules and water molecules contain H and O . Both are compounds ,different types of atoms. Both are formed from covalent bonds and non metals. For further explanation water molecules hold hydroxyl groups that can form hydrogen bonds with water molecules and with alcohol molecules. And alcohol molecules can form hydrogen bonds with other alcohol molecules such as with water. As alcohol form hydrogen bonds with water and tend to be relatively soluble in water. The hydroxyl group is referred to as a hydrophilic group, because it forms hydrogen bonds with water and increase the solubility of an alcohol in water.
Polar compounds are soluble in water.
Lipids tend to be hydrophobic, that is they "fear" water. they are soluble in oil or non-polar solvents
hair
cohesion
Water molecules attract the opposite poles of other polar molecules through poles present in water itself.
Yes. Simple alkali metal salts tend to be soluble with extremely few exceptions; most halides are likewise soluble. An alkali metal halide, such as sodium iodide, should be expected to be extremely soluble in water.
Because water is polar, and polar solvants will dissolve polar solutes. :)
It is called Cohesion. The process in which water molecules tend to become attracted to one another.
hydrogen
First of all water isn't absorbed by particles. The water molecules tend to stick around other particles because the surface tension of the water molecules cant balance the force of attraction between the water molecules and the molecules of the particle.