Any time sperm (or pre-cum) has contact with your vagina (or surrounding areas) there's a chance for pregnancy.
as there is much moisture outside.. and humid air does not soak moisture from clothes and let them dry..
Clothes take longer to dry on an outside line when it is humid but not too much linger. The clothes take longer to dry because when it is humid, there is moisture in the air.
Clothes
Yes. It is the moisture from the clothes and what little lint the filter doesn't pick up that you are venting. If you don't vent it outside the moisture could lead to fungus buildup and other not nice things in your walls, ceilings, etc. Not to mention the huge amount of moisture (condensation/sweating) could build up on the appliances and cause a possible electrical short.
When I was outside it was raining and my clothes had become wet
sure Grandma always hung her clothes outside on the clothes line to dry.
Insulated glass does help to prevent the build up of moisture on the outside of glasses. However, in with any weather, you are bound to find some type of moisture content on them, especially in rainy, foggy and snowy weather.
no
Outside.
by taking off your clothes you have on
It's -Static Electricity-. When all the moisture is gone, with all the clothes rubbing each other, the friction will create Static. Kinda like rubbing a balloon on your head and putting it on your shirt, it will stick. The drier it is outside the less rubbing it takes and the longer it will last.
Because the temperature is the same inside and outside the can, moisture condenses on the outside once you take the can from the fridge into a warmer humid place, however this would not happen if you took the cold can to a place at least as cold as the fridge.