SOAK vs INEBRIATE: NOUN
- The act or process of soaking.
- Liquid in which something may be soaked.
- A drunkard.
- A slough.
- In tanning, a tank or vat of water for soaking hides or skins.
- A soaking, in any sense of the verb.
- Specifically, a drinking-bout; a spree.
- That in which anything is soaked; a steep.
- One who or that which soaks.
- A landspring.
- A tippler; a hard drinker.
- An over-stocking, with or without a foot, worn over the long stocking for warmth or protection from dirt. Compare boot-hose, stirruphose.
- The process of becoming softened and saturated as a consequence of being immersed in water (or other liquid)
- Washing something by allowing it to soak
- An intoxicated person.
- A chronic drinker
- One who is drunk or intoxicated; esp., an habitual drunkard.
- A person who is intoxicated, especially one who is habitually drunk.
- A habitual drunkard.
SOAK vs INEBRIATE: ADJECTIVE
- N/A
- Intoxicated.
- Intoxicated; drunk; habitually given to drink; stupefied.
SOAK vs INEBRIATE: VERB
- Make drunk (with alcoholic drinks)
- Leave as a guarantee in return for money
- Rip off; ask an unreasonable price
- Submerge in a liquid
- Beat severely; slang
- Heat a metal prior to working it
- Become drunk or drink excessively
- Cover with liquid; pour liquid onto
- Fill, soak, or imbue totally
- Fill with sublime emotion; tickle pink (exhilarate is obsolete in this usage)
- Become drunk or drink excessively
- Make drunk (with alcoholic drinks)
- To cause to be drunk.
- Fill with sublime emotion
SOAK vs INEBRIATE: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To experience or take in mentally, especially eagerly and easily.
- To remove (a stain, for example) by continued immersion.
- To drink (alcoholic liquor), especially to excess.
- To make (a person) drunk.
- To charge (a person) an inordinate amount for something.
- To be immersed in liquid.
- To seep into or permeate something.
- To be taken in mentally.
- To drink to excess.
- To absorb (liquid, for example) through pores or interstices.
- To be exposed to.
- To make thoroughly wet or saturated.
- To immerse in liquid for a period of time.
- To become drunk.
SOAK vs INEBRIATE: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To make (its way) by entering pores or interstices; -- often with through.
- To draw in by the pores, or through small passages
- To drench; to wet thoroughly.
- To cause or suffer to lie in a fluid till the substance has imbibed what it can contain; to macerate in water or other liquid; to steep, as for the purpose of softening or freshening
- Fig.: To disorder the senses of; to exhilarate or elate as if by spirituous drink; to deprive of sense and judgment; also, to stupefy.
- To make drunk; to intoxicate.
- To exhilarate or stupefy.
- To make drunk; intoxicate.
SOAK vs INEBRIATE: OTHER WORD TYPES
- To become drained or dry. Compare soak, v. t., 7.
- Pour liquid onto
- Cover with liquid
- Ask an unreasonable price
- Rip off
- Beat severely
- To sit over the fire absorbing the heat.
- Hence To receive a prolonged baking; bake thoroughly: said of bread.
- To take up by absorption; absorb through pores or other openings; suck in, as a liquid or other fluid: followed by in or up.
- To flood; saturate; drench; steep.
- To place in a furnace, or soaking pit, with the object of equalizing the temperature rather than causing an increase: especially applied to ingots of steel which, soon after casting, have a solid exterior or shell and a molten interior, and are therefore unfit for rolling until solid and of a nearly uniform temperature throughout.
- To “put in soak”; pawn; pledge: as, he soaked his watch for ten dollars.
- To bake thoroughly: said of the lengthened baking given, in particular, to bread, so that the cooking may be complete.
- To suck dry; exhaust; drain.
- To make soft as by steeping; hence, to enfeeble; enervate.
- To penetrate, work, or accomplish by wetting thoroughly: often with through.
- Hence, to drink; especially, to drink immoderately; guzzle.
- To cause to lie immersed in a liquid until thoroughly saturated; steep: as, to soak rice in water; to soak a sponge.
- To flow.
- To pass, especially to enter, as a liquid, through pores or interstices; penetrate thoroughly by saturation: followed by in or through.
- To lie in and become saturated with water or some other liquid; steep.
- To drink intemperately and habitually, especially strong drink; booze; be continually under the influence of liquor.
- Figuratively, to exhilarate extravagantly; intoxicate mentally or emotionally.
- Drunk; intoxicated, literally or figuratively.
SOAK vs INEBRIATE: RELATED WORDS
- Plume, Souse, Hock, Fleece, Rob, Hook, Gazump, Pluck, Imbue, Intoxicate, Dowse, Saturate, Sop, Drench, Douse
- Sozzled, Tipsy, Drinker, Alcoholic, Drunken, Reformatories, Reformatory, Hit it up, Soak, Rummy, Sot, Souse, Intoxicate, Drunkard, Drunk
SOAK vs INEBRIATE: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Pawn, Inebriate, Overcharge, Plume, Souse, Hock, Fleece, Hook, Gazump, Imbue, Intoxicate, Dowse, Saturate, Drench, Douse
- Drunkeness, Booze, Sozzled, Tipsy, Drinker, Alcoholic, Drunken, Reformatory, Hit it up, Soak, Rummy, Souse, Intoxicate, Drunkard, Drunk
SOAK vs INEBRIATE: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Quick Dry to soak up any remaining water.
- You soak it overnight in water, salt, sugar.
- Packets of our pick, Soak, in different scents.
- To soak a food item in salted water.
- Add the shrunken wool and let it soak.
- The size of the crabs increased with soak time in the rectangular pots, while it decreased with soak time in the conical pots.
- Do either a short soak or a long soak.
- Press NEXT again and SOAK zone must soak before it is ready to run again.
- Tamil, related phrase, antonyms, synonyms, examples for soak SOAK MEANING IN HINDI.
- Preferably overnight, but any soak is better than no soak.
- AN ACT to make provision for the treatment of inebriates by ordering their detention in inebriate reformatories.
- Inebriate of air am I, and debauchee of dew.
- UNDER NO CIRCUMSTANCES will a juvenile be placed in the Public Inebriate Alternative facility.
- Thirteen years earlier he had produced Franklin Evans; or The Inebriate.
- And, of course, the more quickly it will inebriate.
SOAK vs INEBRIATE: QUESTIONS
- What happened to Palm Springs Soak City water park?
- Should you soak yourself up after a cesarean delivery?
- Can you damage electronics by letting them cold soak?
- Do you have to soak bamboo skewers before grilling?
- Do you have to soak lasagna noodles before cooking?
- What happens if you soak laminate flooring in water?
- How long do you soak bamboo skewers before grilling?
- What happens to nutrients when you soak vegetables?
- Why soak strawberries in vinegar before using them?
- Should you soak wooden Wicks before pouring candles?
- N/A