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souse
1[ sous ]
verb (used with object)
- to plunge into water or other liquid; immerse.
- to drench, as with water.
- to dash or pour, as water.
- to steep in pickling brine; pickle.
verb (used without object)
- to plunge into water or other liquid.
- to be soaked or drenched.
- to be steeping or soaking in something.
noun
- an act of sousing.
- something kept or steeped in pickle, especially the head, ears, and feet of a pig.
- a liquid used as a pickle.
- Slang: Disparaging and Offensive. a habitual drinker of alcohol who is frequently intoxicated.
souse
2[ sous ]
verb (used without object)
- to swoop down.
verb (used with object)
- to swoop or pounce upon.
noun
- a rising while in flight.
- a swooping or pouncing.
souse
1/ saʊs /
verb
- often foll byon or upon to swoop suddenly downwards (on a prey)
noun
- a sudden downward swoop
souse
2/ saʊs /
verb
- to plunge (something, oneself, etc) into water or other liquid
- to drench or be drenched
- tr to pour or dash (liquid) over (a person or thing)
- to steep or cook (food) in a marinade
- slang.tr; usually passive to make drunk
noun
- the liquid or brine used in pickling
- the act or process of sousing
- slang.a habitual drunkard
Word History and Origins
Origin of souse1
Word History and Origins
Origin of souse1
Origin of souse2
Example Sentences
Davis plays Da Mayor, a shambling souse who’s by turns tolerated, mocked and valued by younger people, while Dee’s Mother Sister mostly watches the world pass by.
The briny taste of her souse, pickled pigs’ feet served in an acidic brine, recalled the salty waves.
“I suggest souse,” remarked George, who had been listening to the conversation from across the room.
Specialty products include beef hot dogs, cocktail sausages and hot or mild souse under the Magnolia brand.
There was also the more popular, and often overlooked, dimension of Roget’s work: his was a new kind of lexicon that acknowledged colloquialisms and – horrors – slang, for example, “wassail”, “swig”, “soak”, “souse”, “booze”, and “guzzle”.
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