walk because you will be in the rain or whatever water source for longer.
well i think you will get wetter by walking because you get more rain drops running you can miss rain drops that fall.
i have tasted this and you would probly get wetter by walking you would get wetter because you would catch more rain drops and if you ran you might miss some rain drops.
you get wet more if you run
nothing really, you would just get wet. The surfaces do become slightly slippier due to less friction but this usually isn't a major problemAnswer:This problem is usually presented as "Do you get wetter if you run through the rain to get to your destination or walk?" and has confounded engineering students for years. The walk not run is wetter folks say you are in the rain longer and of courseyou get wetter. The run not walk folks insist that the runner not only gets wet from the rain falling but also sweeps out rain drops that never would have hit him if he walked and so of coursehe gets wetter.The realist tends to feel that at some point in time you'll be as wet one way or the other.See Link for the typical back and forth on this issue.
A towel gets wetter and wetter as it dries.
You can't Run, but you can Walk And Walk Faster
A towel
it depends on if ur a heavy wetter or a light wetter, i think for the light wetter they are really absorbent but for the heavy wetter they leak so for the heavy wetter i would suggest underjams
Twista sings wetter
It is better to walk then run in the rain.
Rats run and walk. depends on the scene
Mark Wetter's birth name is Mark Timothy Wetter.
"wetter": I went out in the rain and got wet, but you went for a swim in the pool and got wetter.
a towel
Wetter is the correct spelling.