• EleventhHour
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    4 hours ago

    Water is, in fact, not wet. Like any liquid, it can only make wet what it touches/soaks. Wetness is a property bestowed upon other things (primarily solid objects) which come into contact with a liquid, but not the liquid itself.

    And, no, adding water to water doesn’t result in “wet” water— just more water.

      • EleventhHour
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        23 hours ago

        Correct.

        This might make for a good allegory for how water isn’t wet. Strange that I hadn’t considered this before, but thanks for bringing it up!

    • @Zombiepirate
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      44 hours ago

      Why doesn’t “wet” count if the liquid is in contact with other liquid molecules?

      Sounds like special pleading to me.

      • EleventhHour
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        4 hours ago

        Wetness is not a property which can be applied to a liquid— only a solid which has come in contact with liquid.

        Adding liquid to liquid just makes more liquid, not “wet” liquid.

        Now, I suppose there could be rare exceptions to this— if an especially viscous liquid were able to produce a surface upon which another, less viscous liquid might make contact with, then that would result in “the surface of X liquid is wetted by Y liquid”— but, even then, the property of wetness only applies to the semi-solid/liquid surface (a property similar to a solid), and not because they, say, mixed. Mixed liquid just form new liquids, compounds, etc. not “wet” ones.

        • @Zombiepirate
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          14 hours ago

          That’s not a reason though, that’s just reasserting the premise.

          • EleventhHour
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            4 hours ago

            The explanation was in the original comment. I simply clarified due to your misunderstanding.

            Look, this is a mix of both logic and linguistics (which isn’t always logical). Even if it doesn’t make sense to you, this is how it is. I suggest that you accept it, however, if you refuse to accept it, the next logical course of action would be to invent a new word which describes liquids touching liquids. Most would call it “a mixture“, but people like you are often unsatisfied with anything you don’t make up yourselves.

            I look forward to hearing what new word you may come up with.

            • @Zombiepirate
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              -24 hours ago

              “That’s just how it is” isn’t a reason either.

              • EleventhHour
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                4 hours ago

                To repeat: I already gave a well-defined reason in my initial comment. It’s your choice whether or not to accept it.

                I suppose being overly contrarian and argumentative might entertain you, but I’m not going to indulge such childishness (or, perhaps, ignorance) further.

                • @Zombiepirate
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                  -14 hours ago

                  Water is, in fact, not wet. Like any liquid, it can only make wet what it touches/soaks. Wetness is a property bestowed upon other things (primarily solid objects) which come into contact with a liquid, but not the liquid itself.

                  And, no, adding water to water doesn’t result in “wet” water- just more water.

                  This is just an assertion that wetness is a property only bestowed on solids. There is no reason given for this, and I have no basis to believe that it is true based on the aforementioned linguistics.

                  I refer you to the top comment: a very common English expression that “water is wet.”

                  • EleventhHour
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                    4 hours ago

                    You’re looking for logic in human linguistics. That is your mistake.

                    It is what it is, and it’s simply for you to either accept or have a lack of acceptance. But that’s what wetness is, regardless of your counter arguments.

                    If you can’t accept that, that’s your problem. It doesn’t change the nature of wetness.

                    This is why I don’t argue with flat earthers or holocaust deniers. People like you can’t be reasoned with.