Water isn't wet. Wetness is a description of our experience of water; what happens to us when we come into contact with water in such a way that it impinges on our state of being
Wet is defined as the condition of being liquid or being covered in a liquid. A liquid is one of the main states of matter. It is a fluid whose shape is usually determined by the container it fills. When water is a liquid, it is wet. It is wet because of viscosity and because our sensations say so. We feel wetness and can often refer to it as watery thereby determining a state of wetness.
Hi, BOO. No...........my silly response was to the question, not to your answer. Anyway, I don't think that we should get steamed up over this question, because in the end run it will just be water under the bridge. Talking about moist stuff, we've got 3 inches of snow and it's still snowing.
Hi, guys. No it's inches!......we're supposed to be metric just like you, but I don't take much notice of it. I'm snow-bound about 30 miles east of Toronto. To appease the Metric Police I'll give you the temperature in Celsius: -28 with the wind-chill.
Well you are ok on that one stewey. As you are referring to really cold weather it�s ok to talk in the scale of Celsius. If it was hot we would prefer Farenheit so we can say things like, �Phewee! It�s in the 90�s�. A much better emphasis than �it�s in the 30�s�. It�s a bit like the spin on political statistics really.
But at least it is snow and not that really wet rain that you get in Lancashire.