| SOAK | • soak v. (Intransitive) To be saturated with liquid by being immersed in it. • soak v. (Transitive) To immerse in liquid to the point of saturation or thorough permeation. • soak v. (Intransitive) To penetrate or permeate by saturation. |
| SOAKAGE | • soakage n. The act of soaking. • soakage n. The amount of liquid soaked in. • soakage n. A source of water in Australian deserts, where water has seeped into the sand. |
| SOAKAGES | • soakages n. Plural of soakage. • SOAKAGE n. the act of soaking. |
| SOAKAWAY | • soakaway n. (Chiefly UK) A deep hole used for drainage, where rainwater and other wastewater drains directly into… • soak␣away v. (Intransitive) To soak into the ground. • SOAKAWAY n. a depression into which water percolates. |
| SOAKAWAYS | • soakaways n. Plural of soakaway. • SOAKAWAY n. a depression into which water percolates. |
| SOAKED | • soaked v. Simple past tense and past participle of soak. • soaked adj. Drenched with water, or other liquid. • soaked adj. (Slang, Britain) Very drunk; inebriated. |
| SOAKEN | • soaken adj. (Obsolete) soaked, saturated. • soaken adj. (Obsolete) intoxicated. • SOAK v. to saturate in liquid. |
| SOAKER | • soaker n. One who, or that which, soaks. • soaker n. (Slang) A person suffering from alcoholism. • soaker n. A kind of knitted woollen diaper. |
| SOAKERS | • soakers n. Plural of soaker. • SOAKER n. a small piece of lead used to form a watertight joint with a chimney where it projects from a roof. |
| SOAKING | • soaking v. Present participle of soak. • soaking n. Immersion in water; a drenching or dunking. • soaking n. The practice of inserting a penis into a vagina and remaining stationary, without thrusting, supposedly… |
| SOAKINGLY | • soakingly adv. To the point of soaking; imparting extreme wetness. • SOAKING adv. very wet. |
| SOAKINGS | • soakings n. Plural of soaking. • SOAKING n. the act of soaking. |
| SOAKS | • soaks n. Plural of soak. • soaks v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of soak. • SOAK v. to saturate in liquid. |