Wet Definition–adjective | 1. | moistened, covered, or soaked with water or some other liquid: wet hands. | | 2. | in a liquid form
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or state: wet paint. | | 3. | characterized by the presence or use of water or other liquid. | | 4. | moistened or dampened with rain; rainy: Wet streets make driving hazardous. | | 5. | allowing or favoring the sale of alcoholic beverages: a wet town. | | 6. | characterized by frequent rain, mist, etc.: the wet season. | | 7. | laden with a comparatively high percent of moisture or vapor, esp. water vapor: There was a wet breeze from the west. | | 8. | Informal. | b. | marked by drinking: a wet night. | | | 9. | using water or done under or in water, as certain chemical, mining, and manufacturing processes. | –noun | 10. | something that is or makes wet, as water or other liquid; moisture: The wet from the earth had made the basement unlivable. | | 11. | damp weather; rain: Stay out of the wet as much as possible. | | 12. | a person in favor of allowing the manufacture and sale of alcoholic beverages. | | 13. | Informal: Disparaging and Offensive. a wetback. | –verb (used with object) | 14. | to make (something) wet, as by moistening or soaking (sometimes fol. by through or down): Wet your hands before soaping them. | | 15. | to urinate on or in: The dog had wet the carpet. | –verb (used without object) | 16. | to become wet (sometimes fol. by through or down): Dampness may cause p
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lastered walls to wet. My jacket has wet through. | | 17. | (of animals and children) to urinate. | —Idioms | 18. | all wet, Informal. completely mistaken; in error: He insisted that our assumptions were all wet. | | 19. | wet behind the ears, immature; naive; green: She was too wet behind the ears to bear such responsibilities. | | 20. | wet one's whistle. whistle (def. 16). | | 21. | wet out, to treat (fabric) with a wetting agent to increase its absorbency. | | From Dictionary
Knickers Definition–noun (used with a plural verb ) | 2. | Chiefly British. | a. | a bloomerslike undergarment worn by women. | | | 3. | British Informal. a woman's or girl's short-legged underpants. | —Idiom | 4. | to get one's knickers in a twist, British Slang. to get flustered or agitated: Don't get your knickers in a twist every time the telephone rings. | | From Dictionary
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Related topics from Ask NewsSurviving January
RainbowNetwork.com - Found Jan. 5, 2009 ... out of that store with a freshly made pizza stuffed down your knickers. ... tips and hints that we made up during a wet lunchtime in ...
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Bundle up for winter ride
Argus Leader - Found Jan. 5, 2009 ... that will block the wind and something that if it gets wet will keep the ... - For warmth, cyclists can wear performance knickers such as the ...
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Squat Toilets Are Not Meant For Women Over 30!
ArticleBliss.com - Found Dec. 23, 2008 ... and we don't ignore it when we feel the familiar sign of wet knickers.
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TODAY'S WOMAN: Sisters are saying it for themselves...
Sheffield Star - Found Dec. 31, 2008 ... like Jane Fonda.'It was like a wet suit, easy to get into and not so ... Possibly the most intelligent thing she has ever said.'Knickers: A ...
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Yorkshire news quiz 2008
Yorkshire Post - Found Dec. 31, 2008 Police £3.2m 2) What was the biggest sporting casualty of the wet summer? ... 34) Who told Yorkshire businessmen all about her knickers?
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Alison Light on Lydia Lopokova
âDonât be a stereotypeâ
The Asian News - Found Dec. 24, 2008 ... started acting in my 20s I was the original wet sari dancer, having ... and this is the first time I’ve gone down to my bra and ...
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Robbie reunion with Take That takes the biscuit
Fierce rain? Biting wind? Let's go riding!
The Oregonian - Found Dec. 13, 2008 Five minutes later, sitting on a wet bench outside the cafe with gloved ... warmers or leg warmers, worn with cycling shorts, to knickers to full
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Gervase Phinn: The circle of life
Yorkshire Post - Found Dec. 17, 2008 'You put your arm around me and you said, 'Don't worry, love, I used to wet my knickers when I was your age'.'' There had been a short silence.
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