Generally speaking, soap does not kill bacteria, it assists in washing them away. However, if the soap contains antibacterial agents that are effective against the particular kind of bacteria, it should take very little.
Bacteria (usually) can be killed with ordinary soap or diluted cholrine bleach.
It kills most bacteria with soap,but not all.More will be killed if you wash it with warm water
Yes. The two companies, chocolate and soap, are different.
This site is waste
Yes but it doen't leave a fruity scent.
Unilever owns Dove Soap Unilever owns Dove Soap
According to me Dove soap is good, natural & a mild soap so its TFM would be more than 85.
Generally speaking, soap does not kill bacteria, it assists in washing them away. However, if the soap contains antibacterial agents that are effective against the particular kind of bacteria, it should take very little.
You use them on your hands to kill bacteria. Examples are Hand sanitizers, or soap now how they work to kill them is another question, well they for example inactivate the bacteria remove them make the bacteria "blowup", and they can stop bacteria from growing.
protex
Dove makes antibacterial soaps - but not antifungal ones.
The Dove Company themselves actually sell the soap to buyers, and then the buyers sell the soap to their customers.
Water or steam at 100 degrees Celsius will kill some bacteria. Detergent or soap is needed to kill the ones that survive the hot temperatures.
a substance named alkaline does most of the cleansing
Yes, But it depends on the brand of soap that you are using. Yes, But it depends on the brand of soap that you are using.she/he is wrong because the soap doesnt really kill any germs or bacteria.it just makes your hand smell fresh and it also makes it wreankealy.can i ask you this question oes germ-x really kills 99.9 bacteria? AND YOU SUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUCK!!!!
Dove soap got it's name from a Dutch factory. Dove soap was launched in the US in 1957, years after Unilever acquired the soap factory De Duif (Dutch: The Dove) in The Netherlands, from which the English brand name Dove is derived.