A free service provided by Writers Nexus International

Writing Resources:
  • New Novelist Software
  • Writer Circles
  • Author Me
  • FirstWriter.com
  • Novel Advice
  • Robin's Nest for Writers
  • The Scriptorium
  • Women on Writing


A Writer's Dictionary:

dry something out Definition


Dictionary Home » Words Starting with D » druggist ... ducal » dry something out


dry
adj drier, driest
    1. Free from or lacking moisture or wetness.
      Thesaurus: parched, arid, desiccated, barren, dehydrated, drained, thirsty, shriveled; Antonym: wet, moist, damp.
    2. With little or no rainfall.
    3. From which all the water has evaporated or been taken.
      Example: a dry well
    4. Thirsty.
    5. Said of an animal: no longer producing milk.
    6. Said of wine, etc: not sweet.
    7. Not buttered.
      Example: dry toast
    8. Said of humour: expressed in a quietly sarcastic or matter-of-fact way.
      Thesaurus: droll, tongue-in-cheek, satirical, subtle, sarcastic, sly, ironic, sardonic, oblique, witty; Antonym: obvious, broad.
    9. Forbidding the sale and consumption of alcohol.
    10. Said of eyes: without tears.
    11. Dull; uninteresting.
      Thesaurus: dull, boring, tedious, monotonous, pedantic, long-winded, interminable, dreary, tiresome; Antonym: lively, spicy.
    12. Lacking warmth of character.
    13. Said of a cough: not producing catarrh.
verb dries, dried, drying
    tr & intr
    1. To make or become dry.
      Thesaurus: dehydrate, desiccate, drain, harden, mummify, parch, shrivel, wilt, wizen; Antonym: soak, wet.
    tr
    2. To preserve (food) by removing all moisture.
noun
    dries, drys
    1. colloq
      A staunch right-wing British Conservative politician. Compare wet.
Derivative: drily
adverb
    Derivative: dryness
    noun
      Idiom: cut and dried
      Idiom: high and dry
      Etymology: Anglo-Saxon dryge.

      Phrasal Verb: dry off
        To become completely dry.
      Phrasal Verb: dry something off
        To dry it completely.
      Phrasal Verb: dry out
        To become completely dry.To receive treatment to cure addiction to alcohol; to have one's addiction cured.
      Phrasal Verb: dry something out
        To dry it completely.
      Phrasal Verb: dry up
        To dry thoroughly or completely.To cease to produce or be produced.Said of a speaker or actor: to run out of words; to forget lines while on stage.To shut up or be quiet.
      Phrasal Verb: dry something up
        To dry (dishes) after washing them.


      Click Here