It gets all blury and the color will drip out.
No, gunpowder does not get stronger after it gets wet and dries. In fact, exposure to moisture can degrade gunpowder, affecting its performance and reliability. It is important to keep gunpowder dry to maintain its effectiveness.
Silk is one of the main fabrics that shouldn't get get wet. If is gets wet, it shrinks as it dries, and makes the clothing useless. Cotton also shouldn't get wet, for it can take hours for it to dry.
If your plasterboard gets wet, allow it to dry for several days, preferably in the Sun. If it dries out and the paper is puckered, it got too wet and should not be used.
you can but after it dries it will prity much peels off. if it gets wet it will start peeling off.
i think metal dries faster because if it gets wet it bounces right off and wood soaks it up but it stills dries faster so i really think they both dry faster.
A towel
It is a play on words. 'Dries' can mean both the act of drying something, or the process of something becoming dry by itself. So while the towel 'dries' something else, it is getting wetter, the opposite of what would happen if a towel 'dries' by being left on a towel rail.
The wet towel gets dry by the process of evaporation. Wet clothes hung outside on aclothesline dry by evaporation.
A towel gets wetter and wetter as it dries.
No.. Once a worm has dried up, the intestines and heart stop working and the worm dies.
Towel