• @[email protected]
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    2 months ago

    If air with 0% humidity can be called dry, then air with humidity can be called wet.

    Language isn’t perfect and it’s often contextual. If someone wants to describe a property of water based on a newer usage in physics, maybe choose a newer word.

    • @[email protected]
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      2 months ago

      If air with 0% humidity can be called dry, then air with humidity can be called wet.

      Yet we don’t do this, we call it humid.

        • @[email protected]
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          12 months ago

          A measurement of humidity, as the name suggests.

          Please just explain why we don’t call humid air “wet”. I’ve never heard anyone call it that in any language. How can this be?

          • @[email protected]
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            42 months ago

            Ahh okay, I think I get what you’re getting at. It’s like how if you dry off after a shower, your towel is damp and not wet because you’re just looking at saturation.

            I’d be surprised if other languages call the air “wet” because that’s an English word. In Chinese, we’d call humidity 湿度 which means “degree of wet”.

            • @[email protected]
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              22 months ago

              Ahh okay, I think I get what you’re getting at. It’s like how if you dry off after a shower, your towel is damp and not wet because you’re just looking at saturation.

              Yep, you put it better than I did! Even if the air is fully humid, you’re still not wet, as there won’t be liquid water on you. Once there’s enough to actually form liquid water, you’ll be wet.

              I’d be surprised if other languages call the air “wet” because that’s an English word. In Chinese, we’d call humidity 湿度 which means “degree of wet”.

              Fair point, I didn’t know about Chinese. I was talking about other languages I know, none of which refer to humidity as wetness (in the respective language obviously), they all use separate words.