Showing posts with label wetter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wetter. Show all posts

Monday, June 25, 2012

wet, whet

Wet or wet means coated or soaked in water or some other liquid--
She was so afraid of getting wet that she took an umbrella everywhere.
The laundry is still wet. Turn the dryer on again.
Wet may also be a verb ( action word )--
Don't wet the lawn with that sprinkler.

Whet or whet ( rhymes with wet ) means to sharpen or hone, literally or figuratively--
He whet the blade of his axe on a stone before using it to chop wood.
He always had a drink before dinner to whet his appetite.

Now that you know that, you can say--
"Have a drink to wet your whistle and a snack to whet your appetite."
"If you get the grindstone wet, it won't whet the knives as well."

Note--the past tense ( yesterday, or some time ago ) form of "wet" is "wet"--
We wet the deck with the hose this morning, and it's dry already.
The past tense of "whet" is "whetted"--
He whetted the knife until it was so sharp that it could split a hair.

Note # 2--the comparative ( more or less than ) form of "wet" is "wetter"--
Don't use that towel; it's wetter than this one.
Someone or something that sharpens a blade is a "whetter"--
The repairman is also a whetter of knives and tools.