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TOPIC | Is water wet?
Hey! Since i'm from the water flight, I have a question...


Is water wet?


How to play

  • The player above will answer the question and say why.
  • The next player to post has to agree/disagree. (with explanation of course.)



Simple right? Here's the catch; You can't use the same word twice, the word "it," or the word "water". (or anything associated with water: Rain, Ocean, Sea, ect.)
Pull out that thesaurus!


EX: User1: Yes, clear milk is wet. If cloud jucie makes things wet, then healthy mud would be making itself wet.

EX: User2: I disagree, the good sauce isn't wet. When fire burns, does that make the fire burnt?


Now that you understand...


Is water wet?




I'll start, naturally.

Yes, I believe that Hydration nectar is wet. When you wipe up purified produce from the saliva glands; are you wiping up the "wet" or the "liquid ice?"
Hey! Since i'm from the water flight, I have a question...


Is water wet?


How to play

  • The player above will answer the question and say why.
  • The next player to post has to agree/disagree. (with explanation of course.)



Simple right? Here's the catch; You can't use the same word twice, the word "it," or the word "water". (or anything associated with water: Rain, Ocean, Sea, ect.)
Pull out that thesaurus!


EX: User1: Yes, clear milk is wet. If cloud jucie makes things wet, then healthy mud would be making itself wet.

EX: User2: I disagree, the good sauce isn't wet. When fire burns, does that make the fire burnt?


Now that you understand...


Is water wet?




I'll start, naturally.

Yes, I believe that Hydration nectar is wet. When you wipe up purified produce from the saliva glands; are you wiping up the "wet" or the "liquid ice?"
Are wii™ gonna have a problem.
If not, then you best Switch™ up your attitude.
@Cyanasuras
Scientifically speaking, no. The individual molecules in dihydrogen monoxide are much too slippery to be moist. When an object is covered in DHMO, this surface becomes wet, but not said amalgamation of hydrogen and oxygen atoms.

(I did a science)
@Cyanasuras
Scientifically speaking, no. The individual molecules in dihydrogen monoxide are much too slippery to be moist. When an object is covered in DHMO, this surface becomes wet, but not said amalgamation of hydrogen and oxygen atoms.

(I did a science)
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@KalliZora

We aren't speaking scientifically, so yes. With the sensation of sky spit on skin being what it is, that would be it's description.
@KalliZora

We aren't speaking scientifically, so yes. With the sensation of sky spit on skin being what it is, that would be it's description.