WET vs SODDEN: NOUN
- Wetness caused by water
- Rainy weather; foggy or misty weather.
- Water or wetness; moisture or humidity in considerable degree.
- Something that wets; moisture.
- Rainy or snowy weather.
- A Middle English form of wit.
- In U. S. polit. slang, an opponent of prohibition; one who favors the traffic in liquor.
- The act of wetting; specifically, a wetting of the throat with drink; a drink or dram of liquor; indulgence in drinking.
- That which makes wet, as water and other liquids; moisture; specifically, rain.
- A dram; a drink.
- N/A
WET vs SODDEN: ADJECTIVE
- Containing, or consisting of, water or other liquid; moist; soaked with a liquid; having water or other liquid upon the surface
- Very damp; rainy.
- Refreshed with liquor; drunk.
- Allowing the sale of alcoholic beverages.
- Characterized by frequent or heavy precipitation.
- Rainy, humid, or foggy.
- Involving the performance of experiments rather than the design or analysis of them.
- Characterized by the use or presence of water or liquid reagents.
- Stored in or prepared with water or other liquids.
- Not yet dry or firm.
- Very drunk
- Consisting of or trading in alcoholic liquor
- Supporting or permitting the legal production and sale of alcoholic beverages
- Producing or secreting milk
- Employing, or done by means of, water or some other liquid.
- Inexperienced in a task or profession; having the characteristics of a rookie.
- Of a woman or girl, sexually aroused.
- Of a person, ineffectual.
- Made up of liquid or moisture.
- Of weather or a day, rainy.
- Covered or soaked with a liquid such as water
- Intoxicating liquors.
- Etc. See under Blanket, Dock, etc.
- Of an object, etc, covered with or impregnated with liquid.
- Thoroughly soaked; saturated.
- Wet through and through; thoroughly wet
- Soggy and heavy from improper cooking; doughy.
- Expressionless, stupid, or dull, especially from drink.
- Unimaginative; torpid.
- Soaked or drenched with liquid; soggy, saturated
- Stupid as a result of drunkenness
WET vs SODDEN: VERB
- Make one's bed or clothes wet by urinating
- Cause to become wet
- To drench, soak or saturate.
- To become soaked.
WET vs SODDEN: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To urinate.
- To become wet.
- To make (a bed or one's clothes) wet by urinating.
- To make wet; dampen.
- To be seethed; to become sodden.
WET vs SODDEN: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To moisten one's throat; to drink a dram of liquor.
- To fill or moisten with water or other liquid; to sprinkle; to cause to have water or other fluid adherent to the surface; to dip or soak in a liquid
- To soak; to make heavy with water.
WET vs SODDEN: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Filled with or containing a supply of water: as, a wet dock; a wet meter. See phrases below.
- Containing moisture or volatile components
- Consisting of water or other liquid; of a watery nature.
- Characterized by rain; rainy; drizzly; showery: as, wet weather; a wet season (used especially with reference to tropical or semitropical countries, in which the year is divided into wet and dry seasons).
- Covered with or permeated by a moist or fluid substance; charged with moisture: as, a wet sponge; wet land; wet cheeks; a wet painting (one on which the paint is still semi-fluid).
- Drenched or drunk with liquor; tipsy.
- In U. S. polit. slang, opposed to prohibition of the manufacture and sale of intoxicating liquors: as, a wet town. Compare dry, 13.
- To make wet; moisten, drench, or soak with water or other fluid; dip or soak in a liquid.
- To moisten with drink; hence, figuratively, to inaugurate or celebrate by a drink or a treat of liquor: as, to wet a new hat.
- (idiom) (wet behind the ears) Inexperienced; green.
- (idiom) (wet (one's) whistle) To take a drink.
- (idiom) (all wet) Entirely mistaken.
- Boiled; seethed.
- Soaked and softened, as in water; soaked through and through; soggy; pulpy; pultaceous; of bread, not well baked; doughy.
- Having the appearance of having been subjected to long boiling; parboiled; bloated; soaked or saturated, as with drink.
- Of sods; soddy.
- To be seethed or soaked; settle down as if by seething or boiling.
- To soak; fill the tissues of with water, as in the process of seething; saturate.
- Wet through and through
- Thoroughly wet
- To become soft, as by rotting.
- (past participle) Boiled; seethed; also, soaked; heavy with moisture; saturated.
- (transitive; intransitive verb) To make or become sodden.
WET vs SODDEN: RELATED WORDS
- Muggy, Drizzly, Soaked, Showery, Dampish, Rainy, Sodden, Boggy, Mucky, Waterlogged, Moist, Humid, Muddy, Soggy, Damp
- Clammy, Slushy, Mucky, Boggy, Damp, Muddy, Waterlogged, Soggy, Soppy, Soaking, Saturated, Sopping, Wet, Drenched, Soaked
WET vs SODDEN: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Muggy, Drizzly, Soaked, Showery, Dampish, Rainy, Sodden, Boggy, Mucky, Waterlogged, Moist, Humid, Muddy, Soggy, Damp
- Clammy, Slushy, Mucky, Boggy, Damp, Muddy, Waterlogged, Soggy, Soppy, Soaking, Saturated, Sopping, Wet, Drenched, Soaked
WET vs SODDEN: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Here, standing on the hearth with his wet hat and shawls in his hand, himself a pile of wet, he turned to Mrs.
- Do NOT use the Compact Air Fryer near water or other liquids, with wet hands, or while standing on a wet surface.
- Wet the cotton wick and fill the plastic flask of the wet bulb thermometer with distilled water.
- Wet Look Sealer seals and enhances the natural colors of treated surfaces with a luxurious, wet look.
- These swamp coolers have a wet pad or a wet filter.
- The seat has never been wet and the passenger floor is not wet either.
- Allow extra distance for stopping in the rain or on wet surfaces because brakes are less effective when wet.
- Flow is facilitated by conductive paths such as pipelines and wet ground or other wet materials.
- Home ultra wet grinder offers bangalore Kindly let me know the kailash tilting wet.
- Wet the leather with a wet sponge before works.
- Our clothing and footwear, such as we possessed, became sodden with sweat.
- Treat me nice: delicate roots are quickly compromised when sodden.
- My clothes were sodden, she whipped it to one side.
- The gravel gave out a sodden crunch beneath his feet.
- Shoveling out the sodden mud and possessionswasbackbreaking work, Mr.
- Men were grabbing muskets and firing, sodden with grief.
- Slowly he began to peel off his sodden jacket.
- Hitler Youth troop leader in his sodden brown uniform.
- Several women rush home because theirclothes are sodden.
- As was his filthy and sodden canvas bag.
WET vs SODDEN: QUESTIONS
- What happens if framing gets wet during construction?
- What is wet protein energy malnutrition (kwashiorkor)?
- Is de Wet schuldsanering natuurlijke personen onwenselijk?
- How do you get into the wet dry world in wet-dry World?
- Does putting a dryer on wet clothes make them less wet?
- Can You straighten wet hair with a wet to dry straightener?
- How do you practice wet on wet watercolor painting?
- Do watercolor artists use wet on dry or wet on wet techniques?
- When was Sweet Little Mystery by Wet Wet Wet released?
- When was the original Love is all around by Wet Wet Wet?
- How do words like sodden and sickly effectively reflect how Orwell feels?