In all probability you cannot. Laminate is made of MDF board and once it has been wet, it usually will not flatten out. MDF is made with extreme pressure to make it flat.
Iodine will color black-blue only with 'hydrated' swollen carbohydrate body within the soaked seed.
because try doing this. soak a cookie in milk. you see how soggy it is well that's because it absorbs.
The dog's swollen tongue was protruding from its mouth.Protruding from the mailbox, the newspaper got soaked from the rain.The bump appeared to be protruding from his elbow.
To dissolve hard water buildup on plastic, the plastic can be sprayed with a solution of white vinegar and water. Let the solution stay on the material for a while, then wash with a dish soap and rinse well. Smaller pieces can be soaked in vinegar and water for a while, then washed.
Wrap the fruitcake in brandy or liquor soaked cheese cloth and then seal the cakes in plastic wrap or in plastic storage bags. Once a week, brush the cakes with more liquor.
apply some rubbing alcohol on a cotton ball or use a pre soaked alcohol pad and rub on the sticky surface.
It depends what the object is. If it can soak up water then yes. If it is made of plastic then no.
The other word is soaked, as in soaked to the skin.
A rum-soaked cake is known as a "baba."
Soaked only has one syllable so it can't be divided.
To fix a soaked HDMI cable, you need to place it in the sun
An adverb is a descriptive word that modifies a verb. 'Soaked' does not modify a verb (eg the sentence "Dave soaked glanced at Karen, who melted" does not make sense, because 'soaked' isn't an adverb), and therefore is not an adverb. In a sentence that uses 'soaked': "Dave soaked Karen at the water gun festival, and thereafter she was soaked," 'soaked' is used first as a past-tense verb, and second as predicate adjective modifying 'Karen.' Therefore, one may conclude that 'soaked' is not an adverb.