as apposed to...?
a puddle of water will evaporate faster because it has a larger surface area that is, it has more of its moleccules in contact with the air Yes, the more air the same amount of water can cover, the faster it will evaporate. In a glass, there is much water that gets tiny amounts of air under the surface and not enough to evaporate. If the same amount of water was poured on a level flat surface (no puddle), it would evaporate very quickly.
It takes energy for water to evaporate and remain in the air as a gas. When it is cold, there is less heat energy available and most of the water condenses as dew or frost. However, there is never zero humidity, even when it's very cold - as long as there is water in the environment (and there is water everywhere, even the desert), there will be some level of humidity.
If nothing else changes, the relative humidity will fall.
Water remain as vapors in the atmosphere.
The water in it would heat up, and partially evaporate.
I believe when you said Humidity, it meant Relative Humidity. When RH is more, in your case 92 percent, the air can absorb less water than the RH is at 37 percent. That is the reason we sweat when the humidity is more in the atmosphere. High temperature with less atmospheric RH is popularly known as DRY heat, where your sweat will readily evaporate and you will never know you are perspiring until you feel dizzy or faint out with sun stroke.
The relative humidity when it is raining is generally considered to be 100% since if it was lower the rain would evaporate before it reach the ground.
100%.
USE as the air passes over the wet bulb thermometer the water in the cloth evaporates. as the water evaporates the cloth cools. if the humidity is low the water will evaporate more quickly and the...
Volatility
All juices if they are fully liquid (and 0 percent thick) can evaporate
the water in the glass evaporates if the atmosphere temperature is at evaporating point of water
humidity meter
It is actually not a matter of sweating more but of it being more difficult to evaporate the sweat. If you are in a dry and windy place it is very simple for sweat to evaporate, in a more humid area there is more water in the air already and therefore makes evaporation of the sweat much more difficult. Then it would appear that you sweat more because you are seeing the sweat, however it is a matter of evaporation.
The H2O in your hair would evaporate quickly.
Temperature will make water evaporate more quickly than wind. Wind will just separate the water molecules, which would then cause them to evaporate a little more quickly.
How hot? How much surface area? What is the humidity in the ambient air? Your question cannot be answered without more information.