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Washing   /wˈɑʃɪŋ/   Listen
Washing

noun
1.
The work of cleansing (usually with soap and water).  Synonyms: lavation, wash.
2.
Garments or white goods that can be cleaned by laundering.  Synonyms: laundry, wash, washables.



Wash

verb
(past & past part. washed; pres. part. washing)
1.
Clean with some chemical process.  Synonym: rinse.
2.
Cleanse (one's body) with soap and water.  Synonym: lave.
3.
Cleanse with a cleaning agent, such as soap, and water.  Synonym: launder.
4.
Move by or as if by water.
5.
Be capable of being washed.
6.
Admit to testing or proof.
7.
Separate dirt or gravel from (precious minerals).
8.
Apply a thin coating of paint, metal, etc., to.
9.
Remove by the application of water or other liquid and soap or some other cleaning agent.  Synonyms: wash away, wash off, wash out.  "The nurse washed away the blood" , "Can you wash away the spots on the windows?" , "He managed to wash out the stains"
10.
Form by erosion.
11.
Make moist.  Synonyms: dampen, moisten.
12.
Wash or flow against.  Synonyms: lap, lave.
13.
To cleanse (itself or another animal) by licking.



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WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Washing" Quotes from Famous Books



... held in her hand a wet cloth with which she wished to cleanse his face, the bacon skin which he gnawed at the conclusion of his meal having left a circle of grease around his lips. Belton did not relish the face washing part of the programme (of course hair combing was not even considered). Belton had one characteristic similar to that of oil. He did not like to mix with water, especially cold water, such as was on that wet cloth in his mother's hand. ...
— Imperium in Imperio: A Study Of The Negro Race Problem - A Novel • Sutton E. Griggs

... higher than 12 degrees below zero. Ink and paint froze. The sextant cases, and boxes of seasoned wood—principally fir—all split; the skin of the hands became dried, cracked, and opened into unsightly and smarting gashes; and on one occasion, after washing his hands and face within three feet of the fire, his hair was actually clotted with ice before he had time to dry it. The hunters described the sensation of handling their guns as similar to that of touching red-hot iron; and ...
— The Western World - Picturesque Sketches of Nature and Natural History in North - and South America • W.H.G. Kingston

... I'm satisfied with my position. I make enough for us two to live on as well as any sensible person'd care to live. I've got four thousand dollars put by, and I'm insured for ten thousand, and mother's got twelve thousand at interest that she saved out of the washing. I like to live. They made me assistant foreman once, but I was no good at it. I couldn't 'speed' the men. It seemed to me they got a small enough part of what they earned, no matter how little they ...
— The Second Generation • David Graham Phillips

... God, before the time of Moses, the rite of Circumcision, which rite having been omitted in the Wildernesse, was again restored as soon as they came into the land of Promise; so also the Jews, before the coming of our Saviour, had a rite of Baptizing, that is, of washing with water all those that being Gentiles, embraced the God of Israel. This rite St. John the Baptist used in the reception of all them that gave their names to the Christ, whom hee preached to bee already come into the world; and our ...
— Leviathan • Thomas Hobbes

... strove in vain to shake off. Unwilling to disturb the flow of my comrade's spirits, I managed to stifle the complaints to which I might otherwise have given vent, and calling upon him good-humouredly to speed our banquet, I prepared myself for it by washing in the stream. This operation concluded, we swallowed, or rather absorbed, by a peculiar kind of slow sucking process, our respective morsels of nourishment, and then entered into a discussion as to the steps is was necessary for us ...
— Typee - A Romance of the South Sea • Herman Melville


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