Wash /(wŏsh)/
Wash
v. t.
imp. & p. p. Washed; p. pr. & vb. n. Washing
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To cleanse by ablution, or dipping or rubbing in water; to apply water or other liquid to for the purpose of cleansing; to scrub with water, etc., or as with water; as, to wash the hands or body; to wash garments; to wash sheep or wool; to wash the pavement or floor; to wash the bark of trees.
When Pilate saw that he could prevail nothing, . . . he took water and washed his hands before the multitude, saying, I am innocent of the blood of this just person.
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To cover with water or any liquid; to wet; to fall on and moisten; hence, to overflow or dash against; as, waves wash the shore.
Fresh-blown roses washed with dew.
[The landscape] washed with a cold, gray mist.
- To waste or abrade by the force of water in motion; as, heavy rains wash a road or an embankment.
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To remove by washing to take away by, or as by, the action of water; to drag or draw off as by the tide; -- often with away, off, out, etc.; as, to wash dirt from the hands.
Arise, and be baptized, and wash away thy sins.
The tide will wash you off.
- To cover with a thin or watery coat of color; to tint lightly and thinly.
- To overlay with a thin coat of metal; as, steel washed with silver.
- To cause dephosphorisation of (molten pig iron) by adding substances containing iron oxide, and sometimes manganese oxide.
- To pass (a gas or gaseous mixture) through or over a liquid for the purpose of purifying it, esp. by removing soluble constituents.
Phrases & Compounds
- To wash gold
- to treat earth or gravel, or crushed ore, with water, in order to separate the gold or other metal, or metallic ore, through their higher density.
- To wash the hands of
- See under Hand.
Wash
v. i.
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To perform the act of ablution.
Wash in Jordan seven times.
- To clean anything by rubbing or dipping it in water; to perform the business of cleansing clothes, ore, etc., in water.
- To bear without injury the operation of being washed; as, some calicoes do not wash. [Colloq.]
- To be wasted or worn away by the action of water, as by a running or overflowing stream, or by the dashing of the sea; -- said of road, a beach, etc.
- To use washes, as for the face or hair.
- To move with a lapping or swashing sound, or the like; to lap; splash; as, to hear the water washing.
- to be accepted as true or valid; to be proven true by subsequent evidence; -- usually used in the negative; as, his alibi won't wash. [informal]
Wash
n.
- The act of washing; an ablution; a cleansing, wetting, or dashing with water; hence, a quantity, as of clothes, washed at once.
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A piece of ground washed by the action of a sea or river, or sometimes covered and sometimes left dry; the shallowest part of a river, or arm of the sea; also, a bog; a marsh; a fen; as, the washes in Lincolnshire.
These Lincoln washes have devoured them.
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Substances collected and deposited by the action of water; as, the wash of a sewer, of a river, etc.
The wash of pastures, fields, commons, and roads, where rain water hath a long time settled.
- Waste liquid, the refuse of food, the collection from washed dishes, etc., from a kitchen, often used as food for pigs.
- The fermented wort before the spirit is extracted. (Distilling)
- That with which anything is washed, or wetted, smeared, tinted, etc., upon the surface.
- A liquid cosmetic for the complexion.
- A liquid dentifrice.
- A liquid preparation for the hair; as, a hair wash.
- A medical preparation in a liquid form for external application; a lotion.
- A thin coat of color, esp. water color. (Painting)
- A thin coat of metal applied in a liquid form on any object, for beauty or preservation; -- called also washing.
- The blade of an oar, or the thin part which enters the water. (Naut.)
- The flow, swash, or breaking of a body of water, as a wave; also, the sound of it.
- Ten strikes, or bushels, of oysters. [Prov. Eng.]
- Gravel and other rock débris transported and deposited by running water; coarse alluvium. (Geol.) [Western U. S.]
- The dry bed of an intermittent stream, sometimes at the bottom of a canyon; as, the Amargosa wash, Diamond wash; -- called also dry wash. [Western U. S.]
- The upper surface of a member or material when given a slope to shed water. Hence, a structure or receptacle shaped so as to receive and carry off water, as a carriage wash in a stable. (Arch.)
- an action or situation in which the gains and losses are equal, or closely compensate each other.
- the disturbance of the air left behind in the wake of a moving airplane or one of its parts. (Aeronautics)
Phrases & Compounds
- Wash ball
- a ball of soap to be used in washing the hands or face.
- Wash barrel
- a barrel nearly full of split mackerel, loosely put in, and afterward filled with salt water in order to soak the blood from the fish before salting.
- Wash bottle
- A bottle partially filled with some liquid through which gases are passed for the purpose of purifying them, especially by removing soluble constituents.
- Wash gilding
- See Water gilding.
- Wash leather
- split sheepskin dressed with oil, in imitation of chamois, or shammy, and used for dusting, cleaning glass or plate, etc.; also, alumed, or buff, leather for soldiers' belts.
Wash
a.
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Washy; weak. [Obs.]
Their bodies of so weak and wash a temper.
- Capable of being washed without injury; washable; as, wash goods. [Colloq.]