It is the opposite of a "dry spell".
The colloquial term wet spell simply means a short period of rainy days. The term dry spell means a period of little rain, less severe than an actual drought.
The word wet is a noun, for example 'It is wet outside.'The noun form for the adjective wet is wetness; the noun form for the verb wet is wetter, someone or something that makes a thing wet.
wet
Wet hail is hail that has a coating of liquid water on it.
evaporation of the water from wet object
they are both warm and by the ocean. but oone is dry and one is wet.
Mojado means "wet" in Spanish.
it sad that you can't spell.....on a computer....with spell check. yet you still want to learn about wet cells
If it doesn't rain for several days (or even weeks), it's called a dry spell.If it rains for a period of several days, it is a wet spell.A "spell" here is simply an unspecified period of time, not a witch's "spell".
spell check your answer
moje mi cama
The likely word is "squishy" (wet and compressible).
That is the correct spelling for the adjective "soggy" (wet, drenched).
No. Magic spells aren't real and mermaids are not real. You can not become a mermaid. If you think about this logically you know that people can not live as part fish and part human. Have you never been wet? Did you turn into a mermaid when you were? Never will you with or without a spell. Not possible. Think.
That is the correct spelling of the word "watery" (thin, wet, or diluted).
ensopado or empapado (often used when someone/something is wet)
That is the correct spelling of the adjective "squashy" (compressibly soft or wet).The more common US term is the synonym squishy.
"Petrichor". The pleasant fragrance that accompanies the first rain after a dry spell is called "petrichor".