Drench
UK //drɛnʧ//US //drɛnʧ//
Definition
To wet thoroughly or soak something completely.
In simple words: to soak or make something very wet
Examples
- The heavy rain will drench anyone caught outside without an umbrella.
- Don't forget to drench the plants with water during the hot summer.
- The spilled drink will drench the tablecloth if we don't clean it quickly.
- I got drenched when I walked home in the pouring rain.
- The firefighters drenched the burning building to control the flames.
Usage notes
Commonly used to describe getting wet from rain or liquids. It can be used informally in conversational contexts.
Grammar pattern
drench + object
Memory hint
Imagine someone drenched in rain, soaked from head to toe.
Collocations
- drench with water
- drench in rain
- drench the soil
Synonyms
- soak
- saturate
- wet
Antonyms
- dry
- dehydrate
Common mistakes
- Confusing with 'drip' which means to let drops fall.
- Using 'drench' intransitively (it needs an object).