English edit

Adjective edit

wringing wet

  1. So wet that water can be wrung out; very wet.
    Synonyms: dripping wet, soaking wet, sopping wet.
    • 1566, Apuleius, chapter 5, in William Adlington, transl., The Golden Ass[1], London: Henry Wykes:
      [] they stridde ouer me, and slapped their buttockes vpon my face, and all bepissed me, till I was wringing wet:
    • 1621, John Ashmore (translator), Certain Selected Odes of Horace, Englished, Ad Pirrham, Book 1, Ode 5, p. ,[2]
      I hung to th’ Sea god, after strange beseeches,
      My doublet wringing wet, and cod-piec’t breeches.
    • 1785, John Rickman, Journal of Captain Cook’s Last Voyage, to the Pacific Ocean[3], London: E. Newbery, Part 2, p. 319:
      The weather being fine and clear, we seized this opportunity to search for the leak, and, knowing it to be forwards, we moved the sails from the fore sail-room, and found them wringing wet;
    • 1937, George Orwell, The Road to Wigan Pier[4], London: Victor Gollancz, Part 1, Chapter 4, pp. 62-63:
      It is almost impossible to sleep on the floor, because the damp soaks up from below. I was shown mattresses which were still wringing wet at eleven in the morning.