They can come in all sorts of colors even purple and pink!!
Lather
Bar soaps high in coconut oil and palm oil tend to produce the most suds due to their ability to generate lather. Look for ingredients like sodium lauryl sulfate or sodium laureth sulfate for a bubbly lather.
Carbon dioxide is what makes drinks fizzy.
Dish soap is more effective at cleaning a penny than water alone. Dish soap can break down oils and dirt on the surface of the penny, allowing for a more thorough cleaning compared to just using water.
A person who makes soap is typically referred to as a "soapmaker" or "chandler." The process of making soap involves combining fats or oils with an alkali substance, such as lye, to create a chemical reaction known as saponification. Soapmakers may also be known as artisans or crafters, depending on the scale and method of production they use.
I guess it makes it clean and bubbly, try it
bub·bly adj. 1. Full of or producing bubbles: a bubbly drink; a bubbly soap. 2. Resembling bubbles: big, bubbly clouds. 3. Full of high spirits; effervescent: bright, bubbly children. Source: http://www.answers.com/bubbly?gwp=11&ver=2.3.0.609&method=3
The bonus puzzle solution was Bubbly Soap.
CO2 well it is what makes it bubbly
It's bubbly compared to wine.
The pasta is safe to eat, anytime pasta is boiled the water gets very bubbly and was most likely not soap residue. If it was soap residue it would have bubbled when you filled the pot with water.
Champagne. That's what makes it so bubbly.
It makes a bubbly sound
Hubbly Bubbly or Hookah's are very bad for you, just as smoking is bad. Hookah contains nicotine as well as toxins from the charcoal that is burned in the Hookah. This makes Hubbly Bubbly/Hookah, more dangerous that smoking cigarettes.
because its the fermentation of the yeast that gives the beer alcohol.
If you wet soap, it makes it a little softer, and it's great for whittling and squishing.
Lather