Science, asked by Anonymous, 1 year ago

1.How do airplanes stay in the air?

2.Why is water wet?


rahul9883: hello

Answers

Answered by abhay5436
2
Answer That makes air flow rapidly over the wings, which throw the air down toward the ground, generating an upward force called lift that overcomes the plane's weight and holds it in the sky. So it's the engines that move a plane forward, while the wings move it upward.


2 . 1) When water becomes ice because it is subject to a low temperature, it remmins at the solid state and hence we cannot say that it is wet. 2) When ice water is subject to a higher temperature it becomes, say, water, and remains at the liquid state. ... When this is the case we can also say that water is something wet.

Answered by VedPrakash100
1
Hey mate! Here is your answer.

*How do aeroplanes stay in the air?

Ans.-- A plane's engines are designed to move it forward at high speed.
That makes air flow rapidly over the wings, which throw the air down toward the ground, generating an upward force called lift that overcomes the plane's weight and holds it in the sky.

*Why is water wet?

Ans.--Water isn't wet.
Wetness is a description of our experience of water; what happens to us when we come into contact with water in such a way that it impinges on our state of being. We, or our possessions, 'get wet'.

So, your second question doesn't make any sense.

If my answer helped you then mark my answer as Brainliest.

VedPrakash100: Please mark my answer as Brainliest.
VedPrakash100: Thanks
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