No. It will float on top
Soaps and detergents have polar and non polar ends in their molecules which may disperse the wax and grease in water.
Oil and water are often separated by density--the oil floats to the top and the water is drained from the bottom. Oil and water can be separated by temperature--Oil usually boils at a higher temperature. Also oil and water freeze at different temperatures. Oil might solidify and is easy to remove in clumps. Oil can be separated from a surface by skimming. A rotating disk lifts up the oil and a blade skims it off the disk. There are filters that pass only water, not oil, and others that work in the reverse. A wick floating on the surface oil will burn off the oil. Lots more ways.
Water, wildlife, and wind are ways in which spinach seeds disperse. The aquatic plant which is known as water spinach is most likely to disperse by water since its air pocket-filled labyrinthine seeds can float and disperse with water currents. The terrestrial plant tends to disperse by wildlife and winds.
no
true water
By water
By water
By water
how does a water mint diserse
Soap contains particles that have a polar end and a non-polar end. These particles are able to attach to oil particles and to water particles, enabling the oil to dissociate in the water and disperse. In this way, soap acts as an emulsifying agent.
By water as it have husks.