Lint and pet hairs tend to stick to clothes more in winter due to increased static electricity. Cold, dry air reduces humidity, which enhances static build-up on fabrics, causing lint and hairs to cling more stubbornly. Additionally, people often wear more layers of clothing made from materials that generate static, further contributing to the problem. The combination of these factors makes it easier for lint and pet hairs to adhere to winter clothing.
no, frog toes stick to anything. they have small hairs on them that enable them to climb, well, anything
Your clothes get wrinkly
Usually the same reason why normal airborne dust sticks to clothing: By tiny amounts of static produced by the fabric. Static electricity. The hairs have one charge the clothes have the opposite charge in places, the hairs are attracted and stick to those places
Neither hydrochloric acid nor its vapour does not stick to clothes, though it may damage the fabric.
You have hairs all over your body that hold the water on your skin.
His clothes stick to him when the weather is hot.
Clothes in a dryer can stick together due to the static electricity generated during the drying process. The tumbling action of the dryer can also cause lighter clothes to stick to heavier items. Overloading the dryer can also contribute to clothes sticking together.
Static
by sticking to objects
Yes, the little hairs on it will make it stick in your throat and you will choke
Only the really wet ones!
Predatory plants that use vey sticky hairs to stick their prey to them so they can devour it.