Excellent stuff but there is a special way to do it.Give the dish washing liquid to your wife. Then you are free to drink the beer whilst fertilizing the lawn with the ammonia.
NH3
Ammonia is used for refrigeration in an absorption type plant use for large cold stores. The ammonia is not the refrigerant itself, this is usually water, but as means of absorbing the water vapour and returning it as a liquid to the start of the cycle. Unlike a conventional fridge that uses a compressor to do this. The advantages of ammonia cycle plants are that they have no moving parts and can be built to any size. The motive power for the system can be any source of heat which separates the water and the ammonia at the cycle start.
iklo;
Because it is a convenient source of nitrogen, which plants need.
We have not uncovered any real evidence of aliens, so there is no absolute answer, and possible answers would vary from planet to planet, i.e. if there were aliens on Neptune, they would probably drink water and ammonia (as it is the main source of liquid). Ammonia is normally encountered a gas but in chemistry, it's the compound with the formula NH3. You should know what water is.
NH3 which is ammonia has the highest percentage by mass of nitrogen.
Ammonia... They convert ammonia to nitrite and use the energy released... Link-- http://jb.asm.org/cgi/content/abstract/185/23/6809
Ammonia is a source of nitrogen for plants that can digest it. Many plants cannot digest it directly, by which I mean absorb it and use it in making plant tissue and for similar needs, but many cannot. However, there are many microbes in the soil that can turn ammonia into nitrates and similar chemical compounds that plants can absorb and use. If the ammonia is not very dilute, it will kill most things, including any plant. However, many large-scale agriculturalists use ammonia for fertiliser because it is a very cheap source of nitrogen.
Bull semen is the liquid that is developed from the prostrate, cowpers, bulbourethral and vesicular gland to provide a nutrient source and means of locomotion for sperm when travelling down the cow's reproductive tract on their way to fertilize the ovum upon being ejaculated via the penis unto the cow's vagina.
oxygen
Yes, but BE CAREFUL when you get it--it must be "unscented" ammonia, which is hard to find some places. Some people are saying, "huh?" The questioner is asking about the "nitrogen cycle" of an aquarium. Fish pee has ammonia in it, like all pee does. (Yes, fish pee.) Bacteria in the tank will turn the ammonia into nitrite, which is less harmful to the fish than ammonia but still bad, and other ammonia turn nitrite to nitrate which is harmless. (And then, if you have a lot of plants, the nitrate will fertilize them.) There are better instructions on the internet, but the basics follow: You need to get an ammonia indicating card, some bottles of Cycle, which is a concentrated source of nitrifying bacteria, some unscented Parson's Ammonia, and an eyedropper. If you can't get any Cycle, go to a really good fish store and buy a bag of their water, which has bacteria in it. Pour the Cycle, or the fish store water, in the tank and add just enough ammonia to turn the indicator in the middle of the card dark. Then let the filters run. Keep doing this until the indicator shows "no ammonia" after eight hours. When it does that, you've got a nice colony of bacteria built up. At this point, change 90 percent of the water and add a couple of the least expensive fish you're going to keep.
used tea leaves are also a good source of fertilizer and can be easily found in home ...one can save after gettin tea out of them