No, it won't.
Organic fat is made up of lipids that are not water soluble and so can't dissolve in water.
Many organic molecules have an end that will dissolve in fat (this would be the hydrophobic end) and an end that will dissolve in water (this will be the hydrophilic end). As the ends are joined together by the rest of the molecule, the molecule has both properties at once and such molecules are frequently used in the formation of organic membranes.
The molecules which donot have polar centers donot dissolve in water as fat and oil,
No, water can dissolve both inorganic and organic compounds. Water is considered a universal solvent because it has the ability to dissolve a wide variety of substances due to its polar nature and ability to form hydrogen bonds.
In polar solvents it dissolves.As an example water.
because it bubbles upbecause it changes colour
Yes it will dissolve in water!!!!1
In general, inorganic compounds will dissolve in polar or inorganic solvents such as water, whereas organic compounds will dissolve in organic solvents. However there are many exceptions to these.
Fat-soluble vitamins dissolve in fat and are stored in the body, while water-soluble vitamins dissolve in water and are not stored, so they need to be consumed regularly.
It dissolve in polar solvents.It dissolve well in water.
Many organic molecules have an end that will dissolve in fat (this would be the hydrophobic end) and an end that will dissolve in water (this will be the hydrophilic end). As the ends are joined together by the rest of the molecule, the molecule has both properties at once and such molecules are frequently used in the formation of organic membranes.
The molecules which donot have polar centers donot dissolve in water as fat and oil,
No, water can dissolve both inorganic and organic compounds. Water is considered a universal solvent because it has the ability to dissolve a wide variety of substances due to its polar nature and ability to form hydrogen bonds.
Some organic compounds can dissolve in water, while others do not. Solubility varies depending on the specific structure and properties of the organic compound. For example, simple organic molecules like alcohols and carboxylic acids tend to be soluble in water due to the presence of polar functional groups that can interact with water molecules through hydrogen bonding.
there are more that two but a couple are vitamin D and C
The liquid that dissolves fat is called a solvent, such as water, alcohol, or oil. The ability of a substance to dissolve fat is known as lipophilicity.
because paper is made of organic material (wood)
Polar molecules.