water is not sucked in by fire. fire is like a magnet to water but they do not connect. when water is added to fire some of the water evaporates or / and weaken the fire
fire and water are opposites
When the water of the plant is sucked out of the plant, and the plant doesn't have anymore water so the leafs droop!
no, fire does not work well with water and the water can only be used to exstinguish the fire.
Fire feeds on oxygen, and water does not have much of it.
Sand, water or a fire extinguisher are all effective at putting out a wood fire.
Charybdis
water is sucked up by the xylem vessels from soil
You would drown
Allegedly, the scuba diver was sucked up with the water by a fire fighting plane and then dumped onto the fire. However, Mythbusters tested this myth and found that the intake valve on most fire fighting planes is too small to suck up a person, and alternatively the suction devices used in other types of fire fighting aircraft are not strong enough to hold the weight of the diver outside the water.
Most of the water will be scattered by the spinning winds as a spray.
water saturates the dirt and is sucked into the plants through its roots
first if you suck water into your engine you allready got problems.but what happens when water is sucked in 1- can shatter a piston 2-bend valves 3-warp heads 4-ruin motor
the fire ants because if the ant eater sucked them up it would sting it
Charybdis
it ran in stampedes and sucked water in its trunk
Fire+Water=Steam
water saturates the dirt and is sucked into the plants through its roots