Water diffuses across the phospholipid bilayer via aquaporins, yeah? Would this be a type of simple diffusion or facilitated diffusion?
Why aren't non-polar molecules repelled by the hydrophilic head of a phospholipid?
Is the sodium-potassium pump a type of uniporter or antiporter?
Are monosaccharides and disaccharides soluble?
Thanks guys 
1. Okay, water diffusing across a plasma membrane is given a special name (since it is the solvent and not the solutt moving) called osmosis. Technically, since it uses a protein channel (aquaporin) it is a type of facilitated diffusion, but you will never see it called that. It will almost always be referred to as osmosis.
2. Non-polar molecules aren't repelled because they don't have a charge. The fact that they are non-polar just means that they can't mix well with polar molecules because the strongest forces holding them together would be van der Waals. So it's not so much that they are repelled, more so that they can't mix well. It isn't the same kind of repulsion as you would expect say two negatively charged molecules to have for each other.
3. An antiporter as it pumps in potassium ions at the same time as pumping out sodium ions.
4. Yes. Sucrose (table sugar) is an example of a disaccharide and as you know, it is fairly soluble in water.