Water isn't wet by itself, but it makes other materials wet when it sticks to the surface of them.
A wet test is realized in solution.
Funny example! Wet laundry is a heterogeneous mixture, because if you have a big pile of wet laundry, it's not "even" all the way through. You can see the different things within the mixture with your eyes. A sock here, a shirt there. A mixture that's "smooth" all the way through (like milk, or creamy peanut butter) is a homogeneous mixture.
Not when it is wet. but will get black if long exposed in air
Neither water nor water-containing substances wet Teflon, the name brand of the substance used in nonstick cookware, among other things.
things that are not wet
Something that is damp or emptiness. These two things are not wet or dry.
Things get wet.
Wet things are provide less resistance to electricity
chew on things, bark, get wet, and many other things
he designed wet things
Sulphur
because the reflection of the sun
It is stronger because naturally when things are wet they are weaker.
Sand, dirt, and other dry things weigh more if it is wet.
If we assume they are wet with water, no. Water is very good at keeping things from igniting.
things rust faster when in wet areas also the salts acid eats through the metal over an amount of time!