soak (s k)v. soaked, soak·ing, soaks v.tr.1. a. To make thoroughly wet or saturated by or as if by placing in liquid. b. To immerse in liquid for a period of time. 2. To absorb (liquid, for example) through or as if through pores or interstices. 3. To remove (a stain, for example) by continued immersion: soaked out the grease spots. 4. Informal To take in or accept mentally, especially eagerly and easily: soaked up the gossip. 5. Informal a. To drink (alcoholic liquor), especially to excess. b. To make (a person) drunk. 6. Slang To overcharge (a person). v.intr.1. To be immersed until thoroughly saturated. 2. To penetrate or permeate; seep: The speaker paused to let her words soak in. 3. Slang To drink to excess. n.1. a. The act or process of soaking. b. The condition of being soaked. 2. Liquid in which something may be soaked. 3. Slang A drunkard.
[Middle English soken, from Old English socian; see seu -2 in Indo-European roots.]
soak er n. |
soak Verb 1. to put or lie in a liquid so as to become thoroughly wet 2. (usually foll. by in, into)(of a liquid) to penetrate or permeate 3. (usually foll. by in, up)to take in; absorb: white clay soaks up excess oil Noun 1. a soaking or being soaked 2. Slang a person who drinks very heavily [Old English sōcian] soaking nadj
ThesaurusLegend: Synonyms Related Words Antonyms | Noun | 1. | soak - the process of becoming softened and saturated as a consequence of being immersed in water (or other liquid); "a good soak put life back in the wagon" | | 2. | soak - washing something by allowing it to soak | | Verb | 1. | soak - submerge in a liquid; "I soaked in the hot tub for an hour"immerse, plunge - thrust or throw into; "Immerse yourself in hot water" | | 2. | soak - rip off; ask an unreasonable priceextort, gouge, wring, rack, squeeze - obtain by coercion or intimidation; "They extorted money from the executive by threatening to reveal his past to the company boss"; "They squeezed money from the owner of the business by threatening him" cheat, rip off, chisel - deprive somebody of something by deceit; "The con-man beat me out of $50"; "This salesman ripped us off!"; "we were cheated by their clever-sounding scheme"; "They chiseled me out of my money" | | 3. | soak - cover with liquid; pour liquid onto; "souse water on his hot face"wet - cause to become wet; "Wet your face" bate - soak in a special solution to soften and remove chemicals used in previous treatments; "bate hides and skins" ret - place (flax, hemp, or jute) in liquid so as to promote loosening of the fibers from the woody tissue sluice, flush - irrigate with water from a sluice; "sluice the earth" | | 4. | soak - leave as a guarantee in return for money; "pawn your grandfather's gold watch"consign, charge - give over to another for care or safekeeping; "consign your baggage" | | 5. | soak - beat severelybeat up, work over, beat - give a beating to; subject to a beating, either as a punishment or as an act of aggression; "Thugs beat him up when he walked down the street late at night"; "The teacher used to beat the students" | | 6. | soak - make drunk (with alcoholic drinks)affect - act physically on; have an effect upon; "the medicine affects my heart rate" | | 7. | soak - become drunk or drink excessively | | 8. | soak - fill, soak, or imbue totally; "soak the bandage with disinfectant"steep, infuse - let sit in a liquid to extract a flavor or to cleanse; "steep the blossoms in oil"; "steep the fruit in alcohol" brew - sit or let sit in boiling water so as to extract the flavor; "the tea is brewing" | | 9. | soak - heat a metal prior to working itheat, heat up - make hot or hotter; "the sun heats the oceans"; "heat the water on the stove" |
soak verb 2. wet, damp, saturate, drench, douse, moisten, suffuse, wet through, waterlog, souse, drouk Scot.
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