this post was submitted on 15 May 2025
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There's an argument that a single molecule of water on its own would not be wet, but essentially all water is touched by other water, so even by the needlessly contrarian definition, water is wet.
There’s an argument that wetness is a sensation that occurs when water comes into contact with a solid surface. Therefore, while water can make other things wet, it is not considered wet on its own.
I'd argue there exist extremely viscous liquids which would be considered wet when in contact with water.
It seems arbitrary to exclude liquids from being wet.
And yet I'm struggling to think of one....
This is my personal argument tbh. Water transfers wetness but it can transfer it's wetness to other water.
Unless solid ice is "wet" you might need to reconsider the "touching molecules of water" angle.
When I said "water," I meant it in the common, liquid sense, not the scientific designation for all dihydrogen monoxide regardless of state.
The reason I was being pedantic is because you specifically said a single water molecule.
Water molecules don't have a state in and of themselves. State is determined by the distance between molecules, whether they form macro crystal structures (ice).
Liquid/solid/gas is a macro state that many many water molecules might be in.
A single water molecule is a micro state, "solid" or "liquid" is meaningless in a context where we look at a single molecule and the things it immediately bonds with.
We aren't in the realm of liquid or solid, we're in the realm of covalent and hydrogen bonds.
Only when thousands of molecules get together can we start talking about "liquid" water.