Meaning of sopping in English:

sopping

Pronunciation /ˈsɒpɪŋ/

Translate sopping into Spanish

adjective

  • Saturated with liquid; wet through.

    ‘get those sopping clothes off’
    • ‘the handkerchief was sopping wet’
    • ‘My clothes were sopping wet and dripping all over the driver's seat but I didn't care.’
    • ‘His keen golden eyes showed that he was not drunk, but his sopping wet clothes and hair confirmed her suspicions that he had been.’
    • ‘The bone-chilling cold cut through his sopping wet clothes, numbing the wounds in his shoulder and side.’
    • ‘Suna and Astrid began stripping off her sopping wet clothes, as the others prepared her bath.’
    • ‘The entire room was soaking and sopping wet when we entered.’
    • ‘Tears continued down my cheeks, but I could no longer even feel them, I was so totally and thoroughly sopping wet.’
    • ‘They were both sopping wet and they looked like they had come out of someone's apartment or something, but I couldn't think of who they knew well enough, down that way.’
    • ‘‘She's going down to the pier with me,’ Jared stated, entering the kitchen, sopping wet.’
    • ‘He looked down again; his sopping wet hair shadowed his face.’
    • ‘He took one look at their sopping clothes, the chunks of food all over them and the general dishevelment of their appearance before laughing.’
    • ‘Stunned, he slowly made his way to the doorstep, sopping wet.’
    • ‘Smiling cheerfully, she walked towards the sopping wet child.’
    • ‘He was flat on his back, sopping wet but not in the shower.’
    • ‘I sat in the bathroom, staring at my reflection as I brushed my sopping wet hair.’
    • ‘After stripping from the sopping wet ones she wore, she toweled off and pulled the clothes from the rail.’
    • ‘Both were sopping wet, which Cixi explained by saying that it was raining pretty hard outside.’
    • ‘He examined us closer, nodding in understanding when he noticed that we were both sopping wet.’
    • ‘She stood in the door and looked at them, taking in their sopping wet clothing and shivering arms.’
    • ‘The floor where his feet had been was sopping wet, covered in dead pine needles.’
    • ‘They were both sopping wet when Kevin finally reached her, but he saw that Amy had been crying.’
    soft and wet, mushy, squashy, pulpy, pappy, slushy, sloppy, squelchy, squishy, oozy, doughy, semi-liquid, over-moist

Origin

Mid 19th century present participle of sop.