Yes. Before they had washing machines, people hung their wet clothes from trees and clothes lines. It does take longer than a dryer, and it can be a hassle on windy days.
evaporation
Wind propels sailing vessels, drives windmills and wind turbines, dries clothes as they hang on an outdoor clothesline, cools you on a hot summer day, lifts your kite, pollinates the grass.
Because of the sun
because the sun is vry hot
In winter, people stay indoors with the heat on. This dries out the air around us and also dries out our skin. It's important to drink plenty of water in winter, as well as use lotions and creams to hydrate your skin.
The clothes are shot by ufo lasers which are hot and the heat dries cause the water to evaporate
In the winter, the cold air is dryer than the warm air of summer. You skin dries out too!
It is both physical and chemical. Evaporation of water is a physical process, and reduction of water from clothing is also a chemical process.
Heating a room dries out the moisture in the area. It de-humidifies the room.
The spelling "dryer" is a variant of "drier". The primary use in most cases is for the appliance that dries clothes (e.g. clothes dryer), whereas the spelling drier is more commonly used to indicate comparative dryness (e.g. drier air).
just like on the winter your nose dries out and the skin breaks some people with srever cases get it cauterized
Kitchen ceiling-hung clothes airer/drier. http://www.sheilamaid.com/ A Sheila's Maid is a traditional laundry airer that can still be found and used in British households for over 100 years. It dries your clothes by using a pulley to raise the Sheila Maid to ceiling height where rising warm air dries your clothes. The Sheila's Maid is often constructed of pine slats fixed at either end with cast iron designed hangers to support the equidistant slats which are used to dry the laundry items