A liquid can't be wet, the adjective wet implies that at some point in time it was dry, or that it had a solid firm which can get wet. Ice can be wet but when ice turns into its liquid form there is nothing to be wet. Get it. I guess its kind of like saying a fire can be burnt, when fire itself is energy and doesn't have a physical form so there isn't anything to be burnt in a flame (not what is burning but the fire itself)
Water isn't wet by itself, but it makes other materials wet when it sticks to the surface of them.
wet cold watery
in the water. Wet water. in the water. Wet water.
Wet
The answer to the analogy "water is to wet as dust is to what" would be dry. Water becomes wet when it comes in contact with it, similarly, dust becomes dry when it is not wet or has not come in contact with water.
Because your only wet when you get out of the water. When your in the water wetness is around you, your not wet.
No you are not wet. the water is just around you. Only u get wet when u come above water.
You are wet.
Wet is the condition of being liquid or being covered in liquid. Either you are in water, out of water but splashed by water, thrown into the pool of gasoline, running sweat from T-rex... you are wet.
hair gets wet in the bath because you put your hair in the water that causes your hair to get wet .it can get wet by playing water games
When water is in its solid form, ice, and is dry, that's when it can get wet.
You can get them wet with a small mist of water but if yo give them water like in a water dish they will drown!