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The phrase "got wet through" is correct and usable in written English
It can be used to describe someone or something that has become completely wet, often due to rain or water exposure. Example: "After being caught in the downpour without an umbrella, I got wet through."
Exact(1)
She soon became sick, "got wet through in a drenching rain," Jacobs reported, and was hospitalized.
Similar(57)
I must admit as I watched Malky and West Bromwich Albion's Steve Clarke getting wet through on the touchline last week, and going through all the pressures that management brings, I did think to myself: "Do I really need this?" Both of them were getting soaked – thanks to Steve McClaren no manager can put up an umbrella until his team are three up with 10 minutes to go – and for what?
My mind started racing... Would the phone strapped to my arm get wet through its case?
First, you got wet.
They got wet.
Her eyes got wet.
"Eyes got wet," he says.
It got wet.
So Penelope Cruz got wet.
Clean everything that got wet.
The thinking goes that just as swimmers would get wet moving through a pool, as particles move through the Higgs field they would gain mass.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com