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TheHvam

Wet is what something that an object gets, water itself isn't wet, as the definition you yourself have, it needs the be covered or saturated with it, water isn't covered or saturated with water, as water generally conveys a body or collection of water, otherwise you would say an molecule of water, as a single molecule can't be a liquid, so water isn't wet.


TheBlueRose_42

So if I freeze water into an ice cube and pour more water on said ice cube, could that be wet?


TheHvam

Then it is ice, and then the ice would be wet, the water would not.


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LKJSlainAgain

With PROOF - [https://youtu.be/ugyqOSUlR2A?si=P06bfXWTJ3a30KUG](https://youtu.be/ugyqOSUlR2A?si=P06bfXWTJ3a30KUG)


TeaTechnical3807

I hate this cliche, but I really feel like this is one of those, "Sir, this is a Wendy's" moments.


Inolk

Oil is liquid. If you are covered in oil, you are not wet. You are greasy, oily but never wet. Lava is another example. It is liquid but it is not wet. So your definition is not really completed/accurate.


TheBlueRose_42

That’s the definition Oxford gives


Inolk

Does that mean you agree with Oxford that oil/lava is wet? Or is it possible that Oxford is not accurate?


JeromeInDaHouse_90

Pics or else I don't believe you.