A Florida restaurant chain says boosting pay and offering better benefits helped it end its labor shortagemisk@sopuli.xyz to Not The Onion@lemmy.world – 499 points – 12 months agobusinessinsider.com39Post a CommentPreviewYou are viewing a single commentView all commentsShow the parent commentBy definition, only solids can get wet, so no, adding water to water doesn't make it wet.So a frozen cube of water can by your description get wet with the water when put in a glass of said water.What you are describing, is ice, a solid, not simply water, which is a liquid. This changes this scenario.No, not really. Water needs to adhere to the surface of the solid and water doesn't adhere to a cube of ice, so no.Water wets on to ice. It's a verb. For a physical effect. That does happen to water. If you want to be pedantic, be correct.1 more...1 more...I'm joking. Calm down, get a good calming wet shower. I hadn't even downvoted you, and now you made me.3 more...4 more...
By definition, only solids can get wet, so no, adding water to water doesn't make it wet.So a frozen cube of water can by your description get wet with the water when put in a glass of said water.What you are describing, is ice, a solid, not simply water, which is a liquid. This changes this scenario.No, not really. Water needs to adhere to the surface of the solid and water doesn't adhere to a cube of ice, so no.Water wets on to ice. It's a verb. For a physical effect. That does happen to water. If you want to be pedantic, be correct.1 more...1 more...I'm joking. Calm down, get a good calming wet shower. I hadn't even downvoted you, and now you made me.3 more...4 more...
So a frozen cube of water can by your description get wet with the water when put in a glass of said water.What you are describing, is ice, a solid, not simply water, which is a liquid. This changes this scenario.No, not really. Water needs to adhere to the surface of the solid and water doesn't adhere to a cube of ice, so no.Water wets on to ice. It's a verb. For a physical effect. That does happen to water. If you want to be pedantic, be correct.1 more...1 more...
What you are describing, is ice, a solid, not simply water, which is a liquid. This changes this scenario.
No, not really. Water needs to adhere to the surface of the solid and water doesn't adhere to a cube of ice, so no.Water wets on to ice. It's a verb. For a physical effect. That does happen to water. If you want to be pedantic, be correct.1 more...
Water wets on to ice. It's a verb. For a physical effect. That does happen to water. If you want to be pedantic, be correct.
I'm joking. Calm down, get a good calming wet shower. I hadn't even downvoted you, and now you made me.3 more...
By definition, only solids can get wet, so no, adding water to water doesn't make it wet.
So a frozen cube of water can by your description get wet with the water when put in a glass of said water.
What you are describing, is ice, a solid, not simply water, which is a liquid. This changes this scenario.
No, not really. Water needs to adhere to the surface of the solid and water doesn't adhere to a cube of ice, so no.
Water wets on to ice. It's a verb. For a physical effect. That does happen to water.
If you want to be pedantic, be correct.
I'm joking. Calm down, get a good calming wet shower.
I hadn't even downvoted you, and now you made me.