Yes, you would get soaked.
If you went to most playhouses and only paid a penny admission, you would watch the play from the open courtyard in front of and around the stage, which had no roof. If it rained, you got wet. If you paid tuppence admission you got to sit down under a nice roof. The actors also had a roof to keep them dry. Some playhouses were indoors (St. Paul's, the first Blackfriars) and so nobody got wet.
Because he wrote them in the rain of Queen Elizabeth, perhaps.
they get wet
Either a rake or liver.
I am not 100%, but I believe it was because there was no roof... Since the groundlings were right in front of the stage, there was no roof over their heads (none over the stage) If it rained, they would get wet! Hope this helps!
If you went to most playhouses and only paid a penny admission, you would watch the play from the open courtyard in front of and around the stage, which had no roof. If it rained, you got wet. If you paid tuppence admission you got to sit down under a nice roof. The actors also had a roof to keep them dry. Some playhouses were indoors (St. Paul's, the first Blackfriars) and so nobody got wet.
dry wet would cause a friction in contact and in flight.
In the water for it would get wet :)
no it would not be wet if would be dry but little cold
That would be a battery.
That depends on where you are getting your head wet. Are you in a shower or are you in a swimming pool? Is the swimming pool outside or at the gym? I would recommend getting it wet in the shower but only for one second.
A wet room is where the shower is on the same level as the floor. A wet room kit would consist of things to help create and install this room, such as the drains and glass shower screens.
3
how would density of a metal be affected if it were wet
Because he wrote them in the rain of Queen Elizabeth, perhaps.
it will be wet but they have rust
One is wet and one is dry