[
UK
/wˈɛtɐ/
]
[ US /ˈwɛtɝ/ ]
[ US /ˈwɛtɝ/ ]
NOUN
- someone suffering from enuresis; someone who urinates while asleep in bed
- a chemical agent capable of reducing the surface tension of a liquid in which it is dissolved
- a workman who wets the work in a manufacturing process
How To Use wetter In A Sentence
- Yes, we need to take voting advice from a bedwetter who thinks that terrorists are supermen. Matthew Yglesias » Endgame
- It tastes like mashed potatoes, wetter. The Sun
- If you like a sweeter scent and have a wetter spot, prostrate chamomile works the same way.
- Those wetter conditions often come from the rising temperatures. Times, Sunday Times
- Climate change predictions for the North of England suggest winters will become wetter, with more rainfall and greater inflow to estuaries and the sea.
- The wetter south-west season runs from May-November and the north-east monsoon from December-April.
- The wetter south-west season runs from May-November and the north-east monsoon from December-April.
- A recent study points to arid regions growing drier and wetter regions having more intense rains. Times, Sunday Times
- North towards the interior the drier cerrado woodland replaced the wetter forests of the coast. SPIX'S MACAW: THE RACE TO SAVE THE WORLD'S RAREST BIRD
- As a result they have become wetter. Food Watch