You can fix that part of your laptop that was melted by nail polish remover by trying to wipe off the excess liquid and then bring it to a repair shop to get it fixed properly.
Yes, nail polish remover can damage plastic surfaces by causing them to become discolored, cracked, or melted. It is important to avoid using nail polish remover on plastic surfaces to prevent damage.
you can use paint thiner or nail polish remover and scrub use Acetone or laqure thinner to remove it, use a toothbrush or something with brissels to scrub it. pressure washer, available at most rental stores.
because when you melt an iron nail, It's still that iron nail, it's just in a different form. An example of a chemical change would be malting sugar, because When its melted, it's a completely different thing.
Cave men used sharp rocks wich they heated on a fire until they were red hot. They then put the rock on there long nail and hammered it down with another rock. This cut/melted the toe nail right off. Or they lived with oversize toenails.
Sorry . . . acetone, which is the main ingrediant of nail polish remover is a solvent, not any kind of a coating. The disc is most likely permanently ruined: the acetone melted the plastic faces of the disc.
you can't if you don't have a nail
A nail in your shoe
A natural nail is the nail you were born with.
Melted
no, if it is melted, it is igneous
No, the word 'melt' is a verb. The present participle, melting, and the past participle, melted, are also adjectives; for example: the melted cheese, the melting snow.Same rule applies to other verbs to make them adjectives.