I've heard to try this: First, rub ice on the wax. The ice will harden the wax so you can scrape off as much as possible. Then try placing a paper towel or two on top of the affected area and iron over it with a low heat. The iron is supposed to melt the wax and the paper towel should wick the melted wax away.
Duck tape
Use vinegar
put weatter on it du
Yes, the word 'laundry' is a noun, a common, concrete noun; an uncountable noun for clothes and linens that need to be washed or that have been washed; a countable noun for a place where laundering is done.
Yes. If you split the sentence, the noun or pronoun should carry 2 sentences. She washed the shells. She dried them in the sun. Compound Sentence: She washed the shells and dried them in the sun.
paintballs should not be washed or dried.
Only if washed on a hotter cycle than recommended on the tags, and even then, probably only if dried on too high of a setting.
She washed the shells and dried them in the sun is an example of a sentence that has a compound predicate. Two or more verbs that are separated by a conjunction are compound predicates.
use mineral stuff and then rub dish soap on it then wash it regularly
This means that the fabric of your t-shirt has already been washed and dried. If you wash your t-shirt, it should stay the same size as when you bought it and not get smaller.
Mary Magdalen washed his feet with expensive oil and dried it with her hair.
To remove red fingernail polish from clothes that have been washed but not dried, first, place the stained area face down on a clean paper towel. Apply acetone or nail polish remover to the back of the stain, pressing the paper towel to absorb the polish. Repeat until the stain is no longer transferring. Then, launder the garment again to remove any remaining traces of nail polish remover.