adj
Sloshing; full of, covered or soaked (with or in a liquid).
n
(forensics) Blood directed backward toward the source of an impact.
v
(transitive, intransitive) To splash backward.
n
Alternative form of backspatter [(forensics) Blood directed backward toward the source of an impact.]
v
(by extension) To coat over something.
v
To dabble about or all over with moisture; make something wet by sprinkling or spattering water, paint, or other liquid on it.
v
To bespatter with liquid or powder.
v
(archaic) To cover with drops; to splash or spatter.
v
(transitive, obsolete) To sprinkle or cover with powder; to powder.
v
To cover or fill with puddles.
v
(transitive, rare) To slather profusely or all over.
n
The action or result of something being bespattered.
v
(transitive, obsolete) To daub, make foul, or soil (someone or something) with spawl or spittle.
v
(transitive) To splash all over; to wet by splashing.
v
(transitive) To splatter.
v
(obsolete except as past participle adjective) To sprinkle or scatter.
v
(archaic, transitive) To sprinkle.
v
(obsolete) To spurt on or over; to asperse.
v
(transitive) To strew anything upon; strew over or about; cover or partially cover with things strewn; cover with straw or strewing.
v
Alternative form of bestrew [(transitive) To strew or scatter about; throw or drop here and there.]
v
To splat; to hit a surface and deform into a blodge.
n
(obsolete, rare) A tract of land that has been left untilled for a long time.
n
(obsolete) The act of sprinkling.
v
(transitive, Australia) To injure through a blow; to induce a haematoma.
n
A small amount, a blob of some soft or wet substance.
n
A spattering or sprinkling of a liquid.
n
(obsolete) A somewhat wet concentration of mud, paint, water, gore, etc.
v
(intransitive, transitive) To apply (something) to a surface in hasty or crude strokes.
v
(Northern England, dialectal) To sprinkle, moisten.
v
(transitive) To wet or dirty, especially by dragging through mud.
n
A small portion or part.
n
(UK, dialect) A pool or puddle.
v
(intransitive) To shoot or project something at great velocity.
v
(UK, dialect, transitive, intransitive) To splash.
v
(UK, dialect) Alternative form of flouse (“to splash”) [(UK, dialect, transitive, intransitive) To splash.]
v
(transitive) To spit, vent, or eject, as froth.
n
A discharge of a foetid or ichorous matter from the frog of a horse's foot; thrush.
v
(transitive, informal) To apply (a liquid) thickly and messily.
v
(transitive, intransitive) To flow or cause to flow in a noisy series of spurts, as when liquid is emptied through the narrow neck of a bottle.
v
(transitive) To splash with small quantities of liquid; to spatter.
n
(usually followed by of) A spurt or splotch.
n
The wave produced by the hull of a boat hitting the water.
n
(obsolete) The act of sprinkling.
adj
Having been splattered.
v
(Scotland, Northern England) To splash; to slosh.
n
prolonged derisive cheering
v
(intransitive, of water) To wash against a surface with a splashing sound; to swash.
v
(intransitive) To spread like a mantle (especially of blood in the face and cheeks when a person flushes).
v
(intransitive, now dialectal, UK, Canada, US) To rain in very fine drops.
n
A blast; a killing of the ends of plants by frost.
n
(painting, watercolor) An effect created by dropping clear water onto a painted section before it is dry, forming a burst of color.
v
(transitive) To spatter excessively.
v
(transitive) To sprinkle over.
v
To spatter; to sprinkle.
n
(rare) Alternative form of pitter-patter [A soft, percussive sound, as of tiny feet, or of rain on a rooftop.]
v
To plash; fall with a plashing sound
n
A splash, or the sound made by a splash.
n
Synonym of plash (“bent branch”)
n
(obsolete) A pool; a plash.
n
A stylized sweat drop drawn on the air around a character's head, as if it were coming out of the character, as used in cartoons, especially comic strips.
n
A light sound or action like liquid hitting a surface.
n
A light splashing sound.
v
(Tyneside) To wade or splash around especially in the sea, or in puddles or mud.
n
A sound or action like liquid hitting a hard surface, or an object falling into a body of water.
v
(Scotland, Ireland, Northern England, dialect) To splash around in something wet; to dabble.
v
(intransitive) Of a dispersed substance such as dust or smoke: to fan out or spread in a cloud.
v
To splatter, as with paint.
v
Of water, to move in a choppy, bubbling, or tossing manner.
v
(intransitive) To make a tumult or bustle; to splash; to make a pother or fuss.
v
To play or splash in a puddle.
v
(obsolete) To sprinkle; to scatter.
n
(roller derby, slang) Skin injury caused by abrasion against the floor of the rink.
adj
(archaic) Made of rushes (the plant).
v
(transitive, military) To pierce with saps.
n
(UK, dialect) A brisk shower of rain, driven by the wind.
v
(transitive) To distribute loosely as by sprinkling.
v
(intransitive, UK dialectal, Northern England) To pour with rain.
v
(US) To cut grooves in tires.
n
(countable) The sound of water boiling on a hot surface.
n
Synonym of skiff (“light shower of rain or snow; light dusting of snow or ice (on ground, water, etc)”)
n
A splash or rush of water
n
Water or other liquid carelessly spilled or thrown about, as upon a table or a floor; a puddle; a soiled spot.
n
(countable) A quantity of a liquid; more than a splash.
adj
That sloshes or splashes
v
(transitive) To shed (skin).
v
To slosh or splash; to move as, or through, a slushy or liquid substance.
v
(transitive) To speak (a language) with spotty or superficial knowledge.
v
(Scotland, intransitive) To drizzle; to rain finely.
v
(dialectal, chiefly Scotland, intransitive) to drizzle, to rain lightly
v
(figuratively) To scatter over; to besprinkle.
v
(US, dialect) To splash or wet carelessly.
v
(transitive, intransitive) To break into fragments or small pieces.
v
(intransitive, of a flying object such as a bullet) To strike or ricochet with a loud report
v
(transitive, Scotland, Northern England, rare, said especially of frogs and toads) To strike and cause to fly in the air.
v
(transitive, obsolete, rare) to scatter, disperse
v
(transitive and intransitive) To strike with a spattering sound.
v
(transitive) To splash (someone or something) with small droplets.
adj
Accompanied or caused by spattering.
v
(transitive) To strike with a spatula.
v
To treat or mix with a spatula.
n
Scattered or ejected spittle.
v
(obsolete, transitive) To stab.
v
(intransitive) To splinter while being crosscut.
v
(obsolete) To split; to break; to spalt.
v
(intransitive, leather-working) To develop a white powder or dark crystals on the surface of finished leather, as a result from improper tanning.
v
(transitive, informal) To throw; to heave.
v
To draw off (a liquid) using a spile.
n
(law) A party who is liable for spillage, particularly of oil or waste, in a body of water.
n
(archaic) Spillage; spilled material.
n
Alternative form of spurting [The act of something that spurts.]
v
Archaic spelling of spurtle. [To spurt, spatter or sputter; to spurt in a scattering manner.]
n
Something frothy and white that resembles spit.
n
(onomatopoeia) The sound made by an object hitting a liquid.
v
to frolic in water splashing some of it
v
to land on the liquid surface with a splash
n
(uncountable, countable) Splashes of liquid, especially noxious liquid, rebounding from a surface.
n
A splasher (cover to prevent splashes)
adv
With a splashing sound or motion.
n
The splashing of liquid out of a container or reservoir.
adj
Alternative spelling of splash-proof [constructed to withstand splashing]
adj
Relating to making splashes or the sound of splashing.
n
The sharp, atonal sound of a liquid or soft solid hitting a solid surface.
n
(informal) A group of independent filmmakers who, since 2002, have directed, written and produced violent low-budget horror films.
v
To move in a manner that causes splashing or spreading of material.
n
An uneven shape or mess created by something dispersing on impact.
adj
Not systematic; Characterized by trying many different things.
v
To splash violently; to splatter with water and/or mud.
n
One who, or that which, splatters.
n
(informal) A film, video game, etc. containing violent and gory scenes.
adj
Characterised or marked by splattering
n
A sound or action that splats.
adj
(informal) Tending to splatter; messy.
v
(intransitive) To make a light splashing sound.
adj
(informal) Making light splashing sounds.
n
(informal) An irregular-shaped splash, smear, or patch.
adj
(informal) Having the form of a splodge; marked with splotches, thick collections or marks of liquid.
v
(slang) to spill or splat
n
(slang) The sound of something wet and gooey; splat.
v
To make a heavy splashing sound.
n
(informal) A splashing or plopping sound.
v
To make a heavy splashing sound.
adj
(informal) Making heavy splashing sounds.
adj
Alternative form of splodgy [(informal) Having the form of a splodge; marked with splotches, thick collections or marks of liquid.]
v
(informal, transitive, intransitive) To squirt out in a messy stream.
v
To soil or sprinkle (someone or something) with a substance, often a liquid; to bespatter, to spatter.
n
The mixture of air and water thrown up from the blowhole of a whale.
adj
(UK, dialect, obsolete) Alternative form of sprayed (“chapped with cold”) [(UK, dialect, obsolete) chapped with cold]
v
(transitive) To cover (an object) by sprinkling a substance on to it.
v
(obsolete, Southern England) To make a lot of fuss about trivial things, as if they were important
n
A brief gush, as of liquid spurting from an orifice or a cut/wound.
v
To spurt, spatter or sputter; to spurt in a scattering manner.
n
A volume containing sputtered fragments of a molecule in a mass spectrometer
v
(physics, transitive) To coat the surface of an object by sputtering.
n
(hydrodynamics) The whole system of flow in the vicinity of a source.
n
hydrogen sulfide when it builds up in an enclosed space such as a mine
v
To be scattered over the surface of (something) at intervals.
v
(intransitive, UK, dialect) To spill water about.
v
(intransitive, of a liquid) To move around or over a surface.
n
Obsolete form of swamp. [A piece of wet, spongy land; low ground saturated with water; soft, wet ground which may have a growth of certain kinds of trees, but is unfit for agricultural or pastoral purposes.]
n
An upward splash; material splashed upwards.
n
(MLE, slang) A knife which is apt to do wettings (stabbings).
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