If water is not wet, then what is wet?
"covered or saturated with water or another liquid."
as long as there's more than one water molecule surrounding another then I guess it counts as wet, sure
It really all depends on how it is defined.
“covered or saturated with water or another liquid” so technically a water molecule is covered by other water molecules therefore wet...
Some say that “Wetness is a description of our experience of water; what happens to us when we come into contact with water”.
Water makes me wet, think about it.
Really it's someone who cares?
Water isn't wet, everything water touches or has touched gets wet. Water itself isn't wet.
WATER IS TECHNICALLY WET., BUT IT DOESN'T REALLY MAKE SENSE TO SAY IT IS WET?
No. Water makes things wet. Water in itself is not wet.
What makes something wet? In some cases it's these fire fingers and silver tongue, but in this case we're gonna DISCUSS why water, is in fact, wet. What is what? Water is H20. What makes something wet? The concept that it is covered in a layer or embedded with a layer of H20. Lets analogize it. Is lava hot? Lava is hot no matter what, just like water is always wet. Like your mum. Except she's dry as a bone rn famalam.
If there was ice, and it had water surrounding it, the ice is wet. If that ice turns into water, does it suddenly change to not wet? If a single molecule was solid, and the rest liquid, would it be wet until that singular molecule becomes liquid?
Anything touches water becomes wet because water is wet.