Drench
111καταπλυντήριζε — καταπλυντηρίζω drench with foul abuse pres imperat act 2nd sg καταπλυντηρίζω drench with foul abuse imperf ind act 3rd sg (homeric ionic) …
112καταπλύνεις — καταπλύ̱νεις , καταπλύνω drench aor subj act 2nd sg (epic) καταπλύ̱νεις , καταπλύνω drench pres ind act 2nd sg …
113καταπλύνεται — καταπλύ̱νεται , καταπλύνω drench aor subj mid 3rd sg (epic) καταπλύ̱νεται , καταπλύνω drench pres ind mp 3rd sg …
114κατάβρεχε — καταβρέχω drench pres imperat act 2nd sg καταβρέχω drench imperf ind act 3rd sg (homeric ionic) …
115κατέβρεχον — καταβρέχω drench imperf ind act 3rd pl καταβρέχω drench imperf ind act 1st sg …
116κατέπλυνεν — κατέπλῡνεν , καταπλύνω drench aor ind act 3rd sg κατέπλῡνεν , καταπλύνω drench imperf ind act 3rd sg …
117drink — [OE] Drink comes ultimately from a prehistoric Germanic verb *drengkan, which is widely represented in other modern Germanic languages: German trinken, for instance, Dutch drinken, Swedish dricka, and Danish drikke. Variants of it also produced… …
118drown — [13] Drown is not found in texts until the end of the 13th century (when it began to replace the related drench in the sense ‘suffocate in water’) but an Old English verb *drūnian could well have existed. The earliest occurrences of the word are… …
119soak — [sōk] vt. [ME soken < OE socian < base of sucan: see SUCK] 1. to make thoroughly wet; drench or saturate [soaked to the skin by the rain] 2. to submerge or keep in a liquid, as for thorough wetting, softening, for hydrotherapy, etc. 3. a)… …
120indrench — transitive verb Etymology: in (II) + drench obsolete : drench, drown …