No.
Ariel
your saliva can make bubbles because it has air inside of it. also saliva can make bubbles because it can and it wants to .
Nope
Persil laundry detergent came onto the scene in 1907 when other detergents were just powdered soap. Persil's had two ingredients the others didn't have, perborate and silicate. These combined to make small oxygen bubbles that took some of the work out of the traditional washboard method.
I do not think so.
Lauric acid is used to make detergents
No.
Lemon juice does make big bubbles because it lightens the mixture, allowing the bubble to get bigger.
Ariel
your saliva can make bubbles because it has air inside of it. also saliva can make bubbles because it can and it wants to .
When you add salt to soap it will make more bubbles. not bigger bubbles but more bubbles.
Dawn by far, the soap is more concentrated Not sure about today, but some years ago when there was a comparison test done, Sunlight produced the biggest, longest lasting bubbles of all dishwashing detergents of the time.
they blow bubbles because some of them do that just because
Nope
Make them out of iron
If you have stronger soap, your bubbles will last longer.