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I say 'no'. Yeah, no.

2007-11-30 08:50:35 · 8 answers · asked by Brandon's been a dirty Hore 5 in Science & Mathematics Other - Science

See, I was gonna go with 'infiltrate', but that implies that the smell would be INSIDE said material, ya know.

2007-11-30 08:59:39 · update #1

Permeate! See, I'm just not that smart...

2007-11-30 09:05:38 · update #2

Nea - negatory, ma'am

2007-11-30 09:12:29 · update #3

Shawn - not yet, but will add that to my 1-item list, thanksmuch

2007-11-30 09:43:44 · update #4

8 answers

It can even drift upwards by 3 floors...maybe more. :-z

2007-11-30 08:59:38 · answer #1 · answered by Megs 4 · 2 0

Hahaha. You said penetrate.

Popcorn smell cannot penetrate the solid, well-built defenses of the evil underground lair.


Ever.




Ever ever.

Edit: Permeate?
Edit II: At least you didn't say impregnate.

2007-11-30 16:55:19 · answer #2 · answered by peroxidekween 4 · 3 0

Hahaha

2007-11-30 16:54:17 · answer #3 · answered by MistiDawn 3 · 2 0

I don't think so, and the kind with butter stinks so bad, I have to leave the house when my husband puts that junk in the Micro-wave. Ugh!

2007-11-30 18:10:53 · answer #4 · answered by Brilliant 1forHIM 5 · 2 0

And you know what odor will penetrate even a 6 foot thick wall made of titanium? BURNT popcorn!

2007-11-30 18:02:45 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 6 0

Asbestos?

2007-11-30 17:10:05 · answer #6 · answered by Nea 5 · 3 0

Only Latex, nothing penetrates latex

2007-12-01 01:52:11 · answer #7 · answered by Offending Party 6 · 1 0

Brandon, have you tried cellophane?

2007-11-30 17:35:20 · answer #8 · answered by Shawn B 7 · 3 0

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