The water evaporates into the air. It becomes water vapour which rises up to form clouds.
The reason washing dries is because water evaporates from it. If a wet surface is in contact with the air, some molecules of water will leave the surface and go into the air, but at the same time, molecules of water vapour from the air will be coming into the surface. Eventually, it will reach some kind of equilibrium where the amount of water leaving the surface is the same as the amount coming in. We then say that the air is saturated with water, and once the air is saturated, no more [net] evaporation can take place. Now, if we look at the basic physics underlying this, we find that the amount of water that air can hold when it's saturated depends very strongly on temperature, and the warmer the air is, the more water it can hold. So, evaporation tends to proceed much more quickly when it's warmer than when it's cold. But even when it's quite cold, as long as the air isn't saturated, your washing will dry, but it may dry very, very slowly, and it may rain before it gets dry! In general, we don't hang washing out to dry in the Antarctic because it is so cold that things would take such a long time to dry. Maybe on a really nice sunny day in the middle of summer, you might get the tea towels dry, or something like that.
No, the roots suck up the water. That's how water dissappears.
they are dry because on a clothes line they stay in one place but in a washer they are getting moved around
Hang up a clothesline anywhere in your house or outside, then just hang your clothing on it.
The water would evaporate, leaving the clothes dry.
the water evaporates (<>)
They can't, they do however greatly reduce the amount of water left in the clothes after a washers spin cycle. This allows the clothes to dry on the line faster and leaves them softer than "non spinning" as the water left in the clothes is greatly reduced.
Clothes lines were made to air dry clothes by hanging them up outside. It's extremely energy efficient, but a little outdated.
Before clothes drying machines were invented, wet clothes were hung out to dry on a clothesline.
The clothes are shot by ufo lasers which are hot and the heat dries cause the water to evaporate
By hanging them or lying them outside...i.e. clothesline
The wet clothes will evaporate and leaving the clothes dry.
they are dry
When water in jeans is hung outside on a clothesline to dry, it undergoes several processes. Firstly, the water starts to evaporate from the fabric due to the heat and airflow. As the moisture evaporates, it turns into water vapor and dissipates into the air. This continues until the jeans are completely dry.
water evaporates
they are dry because on a clothes line they stay in one place but in a washer they are getting moved around
Hang up a clothesline anywhere in your house or outside, then just hang your clothing on it.
They'd usually hang them over a fireplace or just air dry their clothes. Even in the wettest climates, the standard way to dry clothes is on a clothesline, strung either outdoors or indoors.
form_title= Retractable Clothesline form_header= Hang your clean laundry out to dry. What is your desired clothesline length?*= _ [50] Do you need to attach the clothesline outside?*= () Yes () No Have you ever used a retractable clothesline?*= () Yes () No