Sure.
my answers go in order from the ones I am surer about to the ones I have no clue about.
For why metals stick to each other easily, I was thinking something along the lines of metal cations and the electron sea keeping each other in line. I'm not sure whether the problem refers to one type of metal or different types of metal, but I was thinking that metals should stick to each other because they both have cations and electron seas, and they would all be attracted to each other (Like one's cations to the other's electron sea).
For the sugar one, sugar and water both have hydrogen bonds while gasoline has only carbon atoms and hydrogen atoms I think. Maybe there is something to do with the molecular dipole or something.
I seriously have no idea about the metal dissolving one. I get that acids scary because they destroy stuff, but I don't really get why. Same for properties of bases. I do know, however, that metals don't dissolve easily in water because metals with metallic bonds aren't polar while water is, and the electrons in the electron sea would rather be near the fully exposed cations with a full charge rather than the partially charged hydrogen in water.