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Sopping   /sˈɑpɪŋ/   Listen
Sopping

adverb
1.
Extremely wet.  Synonyms: dripping, soaking.  "Soaking wet"



Sop

verb
(past & past part. sopped; pres. part. sopping)
1.
Give a conciliatory gift or bribe to.
2.
Be or become thoroughly soaked or saturated with a liquid.  Synonym: soak through.
3.
Dip into liquid.
4.
Cover with liquid; pour liquid onto.  Synonyms: douse, dowse, drench, soak, souse.



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"Sopping" Quotes from Famous Books



... Herb cheerfully, as he tore a way with hand and foot through the stunted growth of alders and birch, which, beaten down by the winds, was now an almost impassable, sopping tangle. ...
— Camp and Trail - A Story of the Maine Woods • Isabel Hornibrook

... sopping. No, you don't!" She twitched the tongs away from him. Mrs. Aberdeen, without speaking, fetched a pair of Rickie's socks and ...
— The Longest Journey • E. M. Forster

... hours' sleep in a sopping wet roofless house, about three miles behind the firing line. Then the section was roused and marched back to their billets in a shell-wrecked village, a good ten miles farther back. They found what was left of the other three sections of the Southland Company ...
— Between the Lines • Boyd Cable

... Sir Edmund said, "Who has the right or the wrong o' this thing? Cromwell stands for the people's cause, Charles is crowned by the ancient laws; English meadows are sopping red, Englishmen striking each other dead,— Times are black as a raven's wing. Out of the ruck and the murk I see Only one thing! The King has trusted his banner to me, And I must fight for ...
— The Poems of Henry Van Dyke • Henry Van Dyke

... Muir would justify any advocacy on my part of neglect of true consideration, courtesy, or good manners. But where is the "lack of breeding" in sopping up gravy with a piece of bread or "crumming," or eating soup with a spoon of one shape or another? These are purely arbitrary rules, laid down by people who have more time than sense, money than brains, and who, as I have elsewhere remarked, are far more anxious to preserve the barand unimportant ...
— Quit Your Worrying! • George Wharton James


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