释义 |
Definition of slake in English: slakeverb sleɪksleɪk [with object]1Quench or satisfy (one's thirst) slake your thirst with citron pressé Example sentencesExamples - But when people get tired by the roadside, there is no one to offer buttermilk to slake their thirst.
- The ‘Bit of Red’ has a very special place for those who slake their thirst with a ‘bit of black’ in Harloes Bar.
- Back at street level, I slaked my thirst at the Heartland Brewery bar on 5th Avenue, next to the Empire State.
- In a nearby lake a horse slakes its innocuous thirst as vehemently as the peasants.
- We'd slake our thirst with an ice cold Coke - and in that moment, that Coke was our whole world… and that world was perfect.
- ‘In the evening they came to a water hole,’ one caption read, ‘and there they slaked their ravening thirsts.’
- With care he crouched and drank, filling a mouth that seemed always parched, striving to slake a thirst he could no longer quench.
- Last week's festival slaked the thirst of over 1,000 visitors, real ale veterans and virgins alike descending on Troon for three days of eager boozing.
- Weary but compliant men and women slaked their thirst by taking slugs of water from plastic bottles.
- A ‘brandy’ bar is being set up to slake their thirst.
- Hampden stadium is the only venue on the European American football circuit where fans cannot slake their thirsts with alcohol.
- There were no complaints as we sweated in the heat of the sun; our women slaking our thirst with pitchers of cool water.
- Wiping out humanity is hard work, so she naturally paused to slake her thirst.
- They can clear away the fire in the body and slake the thirst.
- It is a local drink and definitely slakes the thirst.
- As she was slaking her thirst, Serena asked the obvious question, ‘Why my help?’
- There are no gloves, no pads, no iced tea to slake their thirst, no lemonade for breaks, and no hats to protect them from the sun.
- But slaking your thirst isn't always easy when you're exercising outdoors.
- Two flavours of cold drink powder, orange and lime, would have helped slake your thirst through the day.
- Dams were one solution, both to slake the thirst of livestock and to feed patches of green lucerne for ostriches.
Synonyms quench, satisfy, take the edge off, sate, satiate, relieve, assuage, gratify - 1.1 Satisfy (desires)
restaurants worked to slake the Italian obsession with food Example sentencesExamples - Until then it was just a block-rockin’ slab of hot and heavy pop that slaked my thirst for anthemic choruses, and towering walls of guitar.
- Seven minutes slaked their appetites, but three minutes bred frustration.
- Before I pressed play, I wanted more sound, layer upon layer to slake my thirst for novelty.
- The bank has argued that bringing in the private sector would slake the thirst of millions of the world's poor.
- It is only what we save when we have in abundance, which will slake our thirst when there is a shortage.
- In a dry season for mentors, will a flood of soft-cover leadership slake an anxious thirst?
- The answer lies with the seven reservoirs that have turned this area into a mini ‘lakeland’ to slake the thirst of Leeds and Bradford.
- ‘Our blood lust was slaked by the destruction of Ajin and Nagin,’ Quint said.
- I will not waste those twelve years trying to slake your father's thirst for glory.
- I thought of him prowling the streets at night, lonely, perhaps even a little drunk, unable to slake his unknown cravings.
- Nothing too impressive, but it will surely slake the craving for some first generation Detroit-inspired techno.
- Seasonal workers are run ragged at this time of year, trying to slake the desires of Christmas-crazed consumers like me.
- All these sacrificial offerings might slake a predator's desires.
- As with religion, I suppose that something is good for us if it makes us feel good - if it fills our emptiness, slakes our thirst.
- While he appears to have slaked his own thirst for now, Carter still believes that more deals need to be done in the asset management industry.
- Art is there to slake our continuing appetite for mystery.
2Combine (quicklime) with water to produce calcium hydroxide. slake the lime within a day or two of purchase Example sentencesExamples - Sculptural stucco is dehydrated lime, which is calcium hydroxide, produced from firing and slaking marble or travertine.
- Hydrated slaked lime is slaked quicklime that has reacted with water to form calcium hydroxide.
- In the desert there will remain some stones, a whole gigantic ruin slowly split and slaked by waters and wind, mastic trees, frost.
- With water it is slaked; and then slowly absorbs or fixes air or gas again to turn back into the starting substance.
Origin Old English slacian 'become less eager', also 'slacken', from the adjective slæc 'slack'; compare with Dutch slaken 'diminish, relax'. Slake and slack (Old English) share a Germanic root, slake originally meaning ‘to become less eager’ in general, before it was restricted to words such as thirst. Slack originally meant ‘lazy, unhurried’. Both words are more distantly related to Latin laxus ‘loose’, see languish
Rhymes ache, awake, bake, betake, Blake, brake, break, cake, crake, drake, fake, flake, forsake, hake, Jake, lake, make, mistake, opaque, partake, quake, rake, sake, shake, sheikh, snake, splake, stake, steak, strake, take, undertake, wake, wideawake Definition of slake in US English: slakeverbslāksleɪk [with object]1Quench or satisfy (one's thirst) slake your thirst with some lemonade Example sentencesExamples - But when people get tired by the roadside, there is no one to offer buttermilk to slake their thirst.
- Hampden stadium is the only venue on the European American football circuit where fans cannot slake their thirsts with alcohol.
- Dams were one solution, both to slake the thirst of livestock and to feed patches of green lucerne for ostriches.
- Back at street level, I slaked my thirst at the Heartland Brewery bar on 5th Avenue, next to the Empire State.
- But slaking your thirst isn't always easy when you're exercising outdoors.
- Two flavours of cold drink powder, orange and lime, would have helped slake your thirst through the day.
- There are no gloves, no pads, no iced tea to slake their thirst, no lemonade for breaks, and no hats to protect them from the sun.
- Wiping out humanity is hard work, so she naturally paused to slake her thirst.
- The ‘Bit of Red’ has a very special place for those who slake their thirst with a ‘bit of black’ in Harloes Bar.
- A ‘brandy’ bar is being set up to slake their thirst.
- In a nearby lake a horse slakes its innocuous thirst as vehemently as the peasants.
- Last week's festival slaked the thirst of over 1,000 visitors, real ale veterans and virgins alike descending on Troon for three days of eager boozing.
- They can clear away the fire in the body and slake the thirst.
- As she was slaking her thirst, Serena asked the obvious question, ‘Why my help?’
- ‘In the evening they came to a water hole,’ one caption read, ‘and there they slaked their ravening thirsts.’
- It is a local drink and definitely slakes the thirst.
- With care he crouched and drank, filling a mouth that seemed always parched, striving to slake a thirst he could no longer quench.
- There were no complaints as we sweated in the heat of the sun; our women slaking our thirst with pitchers of cool water.
- Weary but compliant men and women slaked their thirst by taking slugs of water from plastic bottles.
- We'd slake our thirst with an ice cold Coke - and in that moment, that Coke was our whole world… and that world was perfect.
Synonyms quench, satisfy, take the edge off, sate, satiate, relieve, assuage, gratify - 1.1 Satisfy (desires)
restaurants worked to slake the Italian obsession with food Example sentencesExamples - Until then it was just a block-rockin’ slab of hot and heavy pop that slaked my thirst for anthemic choruses, and towering walls of guitar.
- ‘Our blood lust was slaked by the destruction of Ajin and Nagin,’ Quint said.
- I thought of him prowling the streets at night, lonely, perhaps even a little drunk, unable to slake his unknown cravings.
- Seven minutes slaked their appetites, but three minutes bred frustration.
- I will not waste those twelve years trying to slake your father's thirst for glory.
- In a dry season for mentors, will a flood of soft-cover leadership slake an anxious thirst?
- Art is there to slake our continuing appetite for mystery.
- It is only what we save when we have in abundance, which will slake our thirst when there is a shortage.
- Seasonal workers are run ragged at this time of year, trying to slake the desires of Christmas-crazed consumers like me.
- The bank has argued that bringing in the private sector would slake the thirst of millions of the world's poor.
- The answer lies with the seven reservoirs that have turned this area into a mini ‘lakeland’ to slake the thirst of Leeds and Bradford.
- All these sacrificial offerings might slake a predator's desires.
- Before I pressed play, I wanted more sound, layer upon layer to slake my thirst for novelty.
- While he appears to have slaked his own thirst for now, Carter still believes that more deals need to be done in the asset management industry.
- As with religion, I suppose that something is good for us if it makes us feel good - if it fills our emptiness, slakes our thirst.
- Nothing too impressive, but it will surely slake the craving for some first generation Detroit-inspired techno.
2Combine (quicklime) with water to produce calcium hydroxide. Example sentencesExamples - Sculptural stucco is dehydrated lime, which is calcium hydroxide, produced from firing and slaking marble or travertine.
- In the desert there will remain some stones, a whole gigantic ruin slowly split and slaked by waters and wind, mastic trees, frost.
- With water it is slaked; and then slowly absorbs or fixes air or gas again to turn back into the starting substance.
- Hydrated slaked lime is slaked quicklime that has reacted with water to form calcium hydroxide.
Origin Old English slacian ‘become less eager’, also ‘slacken’, from the adjective slæc ‘slack’; compare with Dutch slaken ‘diminish, relax’. |