There are many different substances used for cleaning called soap.
One is basically sodium lauryl sulfate. Another, old fashioned lye soap, is mostly sodium stearate. Liquid soaps may be made from palm oil, coconut oil, or other vegetable oils instead of beef fat.
The end of the name comes from the name of a fatty acid: lauric acid, stearic acid, palmitic acid, oleic acid, and so on. The different names tell scientists how many carbons their are in the "fatty" part of the molecule, and how they're bonded.
Actual fats and oils contain complicated mixtures of different fatty acids in various proportions. Palm oil, for example, is just under half palmitic acid, with a bit less oleic acid, and small portions of linoleic, stearic, and myristic acids.
So there is no one single scientific name for soap, and soaps generally actually are several different chemicals anyway.
Soaps are Sodium or Potassium salts of long chain fatty acids as Palmitic acid, Stearic acid, oleic acid e.t.c, so their chemical names are Sodium palmitate, Sodium stearate, Potassium oleate e.t.c
That IS the scientific name.
the scientific name for pearlwort is sagina.
Propane's scientific name is propane.
A scientific name for a Bat is called Chiroptera.
soap doesn't have a scientific name correct your question it is scientific name of olive plant
Soap doesn't have a special scientific name.
Yucca Elata
Soaps are Sodium or Potassium salts of long chain fatty acids as Palmitic acid, Stearic acid, oleic acid e.t.c, so their chemical names are Sodium palmitate, Sodium stearate, Potassium oleate e.t.c
Soap?
This is so easy you just have to name what soap does and how it feels and things
John 'Soap' Mactavish
I'm not sure about the name of a volcano, but there is a soap called Lava.
The scientific name for squids is Decapodiformes.
The scientific name for chrysanthemums is Chrysanthemum spp.
Cnidaria is the scientific name.
The Tamil name for soap nut is சிகப்பு பல் (Sikappu pal).