There are several ways to dry a wet piece of cloth more quickly. One obvious way is to throw it in a dryer, which heats it to make the water evaporate faster, and tumbles it to expose various parts of the cloth to the warm air. If you don't want to do that, maximizing the exposed surface (by, say, hanging it from a clothesline and stretching it out rather than just draping the wadded shirt over the line) will help.
Always check the label before you put something in a tumble drier, as some fabrics can be damaged by them. Hanging outside in a breeze is also helpful.
Hang it outsde on the line or put it in a drier.
Your dryer should dry it. The clothes might be a little damp but a good non-cheapy dryer should give you dry clothes no matter what.
Sand, dirt, and other dry things weigh more if it is wet.
This is done because When surface area is increased evaporation becomes faster.When we spread the wet clothes the surface area get increased and evaporation takes place at a faster rate
The more you unfold/flatten them out, or hang them up, the more you expose them to the air, allowing the water to evaporate more quickly (drying them).
If your white shirt got wet and you want to dry it, put it in a dryer, or let it air out, outside, until it is dry.
yes
If you want to dry your plate faster use a clean cloth.
Hang it outsde on the line or put it in a drier.
It grows faster on a wet substance because its spores reproduce.
You can always get a runner's shirt made of water-repellent materials to keep you dry.
wet bread
Yes. A wet animal will cool faster than a dry animal. The evaporation of the water removes heat from the body and cools it.
A dry baseball would fly faster because it is not as heavy as a water-logged baseball.
yeah
Dry, because when you put the dye in your hair will get wet.
The dry sand would heat up faster because there are less compact molecules then the wet sand, so it's easier for the sun's warming rays to get through the molecules.