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3 RepliesWater makes things wet, and it makes itself wet. How do I know this? Simple; [i][u]wet[/u][/i] (adj): covered or saturated with water or another liquid. Water molecules make contact with each other, therefore those water molecules are wet.
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1 Reply[spoiler]perhaps[/spoiler]
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2 RepliesYes. I refuse to elaborate further.
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2 RepliesIs dirt dirty?
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2 RepliesIt's not wet, you guys are just being snowed by big moisture's propaganda.
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Water isn’t wet. It’s just made up of wet Molecules.
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6 Replies
MellloBreadweird gay girl - old
I’m so tired of people asking this question -
1 ReplyEdited by Cultmeister: 9/29/2021 10:26:15 AMIf a tree falls and there’s nobody around to hear it, does it make a sound? Yes - a tree falling does physically create vibrational waves. No - ‘sound’ only exists when there’s something to receive those waves in a meaningful way. This is like saying fire isn’t hot or ice isn’t cold just because there’s nothing touching it to feel the ‘hot’ or ‘cold’; so it all depends on how pedantic you’re feeling today. Can’t we describe ‘water’ as simply a name for a large body of wetness? Because realistically when was the last time you saw water ‘by itself’? It’s always in a container or being touched by something, so is always in the state of making something else wet. And how much water does it take for something to become wet? If I jump into a swimming pool, is it only the water immediately surrounding me making me wet, or is it the whole pool’s worth of water? Why? Would water make a vacuum wet? And how would you know? Since by touching the vacuum to find out it‘s no longer a vacuum any more.
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Edited by Speaker: 9/28/2021 1:57:29 PMThis water is so wet guys - spoken by only stoners and people on hard drugs. Water does not require the moniker of "wet" because it's water- wet was literally derived from water. To say water is wet is silly. To say it is dry is also silly- as dry requires the absence of water- not water itself "being all dry and stuff" You are all not as smart as me... water can neither be wet nor dry because it is the deciding factor of both states dry and wet. Is water present on the material? If yes, then the material is wet, if not, it is dry. Water itself cannot be wet- because it is the thing that does the wetting of all other things that are not water. Water cannot be wet- but it can make other things wet.
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1 Reply“Wet” is a term used to describe solids. Liquids are neither wet nor dry. If something is wet, it is a solid covered by a liquid, if something is dry it is a solid where there are low or nonexistent levels of liquid. Likewise, gasses aren’t measured with “wetness” either, but humidity.
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Water is a compressed block of wet
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Edited by High Charity: 9/28/2021 3:46:54 PMWater isn't wet because a thing has to be in a state of dryness in order to be wet, even ignoring the fact that its a liquid
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1 ReplyWater iws swow nwot wet you swussy bwakas
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No.[spoiler]licks finger [/spoiler]
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2 RepliesDo the people voting “no” think that water is dry…?
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3 RepliesPeople say no because it’s what makes stuff wet but fail to realize that the water molecules make each other wet in a perpetual cycle of wetness.
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Why did Judas rat to Romans while Jesus slept? -4th Chamber