Water isn't wet by itself, but it makes other materials wet when it sticks to the surface of them.
Because it repeatedly goes through a wet and dry cycle.
Wetsuits are a great example of how water is an insulator. when the wet suit gets wet, it puts a thin layer of water between the suit and your skin. This layer of water keeps your body heat in, and the cold water out.
The hydrogen creates a sticky bond with the oxygen molecule to create what we know as a wet texture.
The copper will explode ??? * it gets wet * the copper ore goes through several stages of hydration as the water is absorbed, changing its crystal structure. This is a form of structural change but I've never seen it explode.
A waterproof jacket. Oxygen
Light
A towel. :D
It gets wet. It's water
yes with distilled water
The water vapor melts and it goes into the mountain
No tap water doesnt have salt as it goes through several filtres before reaching your tap.
well that a good question because our skin has a moist spongy scent to it so to most other things it doesnt feel wet it feels like something different
it is friction and when the water goes on the brakes and tires they bond together
Water isn't wet by itself, but it makes other materials wet when it sticks to the surface of them.
It gets wet. Beyond that, what happens depends on exactly what it's made of.
This doesnt make sense, but you can put sodium in water and it will smoulder producing hydrogen gas.