No, vinegar (acetic acid) and oil are not soluble in each other because they are two immiscible substances. Vinegar is polar and water-soluble, whereas oil is nonpolar and hydrophobic.
Extremely.
Vinegar is already a mixture containing acetic acid and water. You can mix in more water and you will have a more dilute vinegar. We more often say that two liquids are miscible rather than that one is soluble in the other.
yep
No, there is no vitamin C soluble in vinegar.
Oil and vinegar are not miscible.
Jade is not soluble in vinegar.
The solvent is usually the one that is present in large amount. So, if you had 1 ml vinegar and 10 ml water, then water is the solvent. If you have 1 ml water and 10 ml vinegar, then vinegar is the solvent. But recall that vinegar itself has water as the solvent, so it gets confusing.
No, vinegar is not soluble in kerosene because they are chemically different substances. Vinegar is mostly composed of water and acetic acid, while kerosene is a hydrocarbon mixture. Since water and oil-based substances like kerosene do not mix, vinegar will not dissolve in kerosene.
Its not a smart idea. Although crack isn't water soluble, its vinegar soluble. But injecting vinegar is highly dangerous. Cocaine (coke), which is powder form of crack is water soluble and is a lot safer than shooting up crack.
TiCl4+2H2O--->TiO2+4HCl TiCl4 mol=5600g\[47.87+142] = 29.49mol TiO2 moles=29.49mol TiO2 mass=2355g
Calcium acetate is reasonably soluble in water, so vinegar will dissolve limestone (calcium carbonate).