The wasp sting venom is alkaline, and so can be treated with a mild acid like vinegar to reduce the pain. By contrast the bee sting is acidic. An easy way to remember is that the word 'bee' has fewer letters than wasp, and the word 'acid' has fewer letters than alkali.
A wasp is an insect with a very painful sting.
sting
This is a highly contentious topic. The primary problem substances in wasp stings are formic acid, acetylcholine, and seratonin. All three cause an inflammatory response, which is what produces the pain. If you act fast, a good buffer like baking soda would help neutralize the acid, but you would still have the problem of the other two inflammatory substances, which can be more powerful. An anti inflammatory drug like ibuprofen could help. Most often, the medical treatment of choice are topicals such as cortisone. Nothing known at this point in time, however, can "neutralize" a wasp sting.
This needs a complete sentence to properly translate. Picar is the closest Spanish word for Sting. It also could mean bite, prick, or itch. La abispa te puede picar (The wasp could sting you)
The word equation for sodium bicarbonate is: sodium bicarbonate (sodium hydrogen carbonate) + acetic acid (vinegar) → water + carbon dioxide + sodium acetate.
baking soda+vinegar=acidetic baking soda Is aprocess in with they react to one another in different ways. peaceout
Yes, the word 'wasp' is a noun, a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a type of insect; a word for a thing.
A chemical reaction for this process doesn't exist.
to sting: stechensting as in bee sting: Stich
The noun 'wasp' is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a type of insect; a word for a thing.
There are four phonemes in the word "sting": /s/ /t/ /ɪ/ /ŋ/.