Um. What?
Non-polar substances are not attracted to water, so water will not stick to them.
Hydrocarbons for example.
oil
Water makes everything wet while rain makes that thing dry....Their nature is totally opposite....
it does get wet it just dries quickly
Wet wood has traces of all sorts of materials in it that can ionize. The ions make the water conductive. The same sort of thing does not usually happen with plastic, but it can if there are materials on it that can ionize in water. I have seen a person get a bad shock from a plastic mixing vessel because the vessel was covered with splashes of wet chemicals and an attached motor had an electrical fault and was not grounded properly.
What kind of paper, how wet, for how long. What is your question?
Electricity can't get wet, but it can travel thru water. (not pure water)
oil
A substandard thing that is not really wet.
Hydrophobic material, they repel water.
Water isn't wet by itself, but it makes other materials wet when it sticks to the surface of them.
water can purify,clean,freshen,wet,make you smell nice,hydrate and wash
When sandstone gets wet it absorbs the water and its colour gets darker.
No - after you wet something it increases its weight because water has weight.
Your cell phone because it could get wet and die.
Water makes everything wet while rain makes that thing dry....Their nature is totally opposite....
Dry water is a powdered liquid. It is a water air emulsion that has tiny water droplets. The water droplets are the size of a grain of sand. ==================================================== I am not sure of the veracity of the above answer, the water droplets would still each be wet!! However, in its solid form, ice, water is no longer wet.
wet cold watery