Literary notes about Sopping (AI summary)
The word “sopping” is used to impart an immediate, tactile sense of extreme wetness that affects both characters and settings. Authors often employ it in physical contexts—illustrating, for example, clothing so drenched that it must be discarded carelessly when soaked through [1] or a ship’s deck rendered nearly unworkable by the heavy, sopping rain [2]. At other times, “sopping” works metaphorically to amplify emotional states, as when a character wipes away tears with a handkerchief completely drenched in sorrow [3]. This recurrent descriptor not only establishes a vivid, almost palpable environment but also deepens the reader’s immersion by aligning external conditions with the internal atmosphere of the narrative [4, 5].