no, oil is insoluble in water. it doesn't completely mix with the water.
AnswerOil is NOT soluble in water. If you were to put oil into a glass of watter, you would notice the oil floats along the top.There is a riddle to answer your question:
Oil and water did not get along until a slippery object came along.
see what this means is if you put oil and water they wont combine together, but if you put soap in with it they will mix perfectly
Oil and water do not chemically react.
Water is generally considered to be polluted with oil once it has about 10 mg/L of oil in it (essentially 10 litres of oil per million litres of water). One litre of oil therefore pollutes 100,000 litres of water (100m3)
didnt you pay atention in 5th grade science? oils are lighter than water
Water is polar while oil is non polar. Since like dissolves like, they can't mix.
polarity! Polarity is the reason that water and oil do not mix
It can dissolve in a liquid (water)
Chalk is essentially calcium carbonate, CaCO3, and in not soluble in water to any significant extent.
It's MgCl2, and yes, it is soluble. It's an ionic compound, and ionic compounds are very polar. Water is polar as well, so magnesium chloride easily dissolves in water.
it can be dissolved in fat meaning it is a hydrocarbon
No, it is not. Oil and water do not mix. If you pour oil into water, the oil will float to the surface. If you pour water into oil, the water will sink to the bottom and the oil will float on top.
Oil and water can't mix. They won't go together. The oil with just sit it the water or on top of the oil the water.
Water and olive oil are not miscible.
Oil and water do not mix...
Use water and coal. :D
no oil and water do not mix
water is renewable but not oil.
Water and oil is a heterogeneous mixture. Oil can be separated from water via specific methods. That's why a combination of water and oil is heterogeneous.