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drenched (verb)

См. также в других словарях:

  • drench — [[t]dre̱ntʃ[/t]] drenches, drenching, drenched VERB To drench something or someone means to make them completely wet. [V n] They turned fire hoses on the people and drenched them. [get V ed] ...the idea of spending two whole days hanging on to a… …   English dictionary

  • drench — verb 1》 wet thoroughly; soak.     ↘[often as adjective drenched] cover liberally with something: a sun drenched clearing. 2》 forcibly administer a liquid medicine to (an animal). noun a dose of medicine administered to an animal. ↘archaic a… …   English new terms dictionary

  • overtop — verb To be higher than, to rise over the top of. There was a single birch tree that overtopped the other trees on the island, and was now picked out against the moon drenched sky …   Wiktionary

  • drench — verb the rain has drenched us to the bone Syn: soak, saturate, wet through, permeate, douse, souse; drown, swamp, inundate, flood; steep, bathe …   Thesaurus of popular words

  • swim — verb 1) they swam in the pool Syn: bathe, take a dip, splash around; float, tread water, paddle 2) his food was swimming in gravy Syn: be saturated in, be drenched in, be soaked in, be steeped in, b …   Thesaurus of popular words

  • inebriate — verb (t) /ɪnˈibrieɪt / (say in eebreeayt) (inebriated, inebriating) 1. to make drunk; intoxicate. 2. to intoxicate mentally or emotionally; exhilarate. –noun /ɪnˈibriət/ (say in eebreeuht) 3. an intoxicated person. 4. a habitual drunkard.… …  

  • drencher — drench (drĕnch) tr.v. drenched, drench·ing, drench·es 1) To wet through and through; soak. 2) To administer a large oral dose of liquid medicine to (an animal). 3) To provide with something in great abundance; surfeit: »just drenched in money. n …   Word Histories

  • wet — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) adj. damp, moist, dewy; clammy, dank, humid, dripping; rainy, showery, foggy, misty; soaked, drenched, saturated; watery, waterlogged. v. t. soak, moisten, dampen, drench, saturate; immerse, dip,… …   English dictionary for students

  • souse — I. verb (soused; sousing) Etymology: Middle English, from Anglo French suz, souce pickling juice, of Germanic origin; akin to Old High German sulza brine, Old English sealt salt Date: 14th century transitive verb 1. pickle 2. a. to plunge in… …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • souse — I. [c]/saʊs / (say sows) verb (soused, sousing) –verb (t) 1. to plunge into water or other liquid. 2. to drench with water, etc. 3. to dash or pour as water. 4. to steep in pickling liquid; pickle. 5. Colloquial to intoxicate. –verb (i) 6. to… …  

  • Kakekotoba — The Nihongo|Kakekotoba|掛詞| or pivot words are rhetorical devices used in Japanese poetry 31 syllable, Waka (poetry). This trope uses the phonetic reading of a grouping of Kanji (Chinese characters) to suggest several interpretations: first on the …   Wikipedia

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