thirsty
thirsty — adjective
1. feeling that you need or want to drink something, especially water — the usual p
feeling that you need or want to drink something, especially water — the usual physical sensation when your body lacks fluid.
Ramón ran five kilometres under the hot sun, felt thirsty, and drank a whole bottle of water.
feel + thirsty + reason (physical cause)
The hiker carried extra water because she knew she would get thirsty on the trail.
get thirsty — change of state
Are you thirsty? I have some cold lemonade in the fridge.
The children came in from playing, hot and thirsty, and went straight for the kitchen tap.
- dehydrated
more clinical or serious; refers to a medical lack of water in the body
- parched
more dramatic or old-fashioned for physical thirst ('I'm parched!')
- dry
describes the feeling in the mouth rather than the whole-body need
常見錯誤
2. having an extremely strong and eager desire for something abstract such as power
having an extremely strong and eager desire for something abstract such as power, knowledge, wealth, or revenge — wanting it as intensely as a thirsty person wants water.
The young dictator was thirsty for power and imprisoned anyone who questioned his authority.
thirsty for + power
Xiu was thirsty for knowledge and spent every evening reading scientific journals.
thirsty for + knowledge
A general who is thirsty for revenge may send soldiers into a battle they cannot win.
The company's board was thirsty for profit and approved a plan that harmed local communities.
- eager
less intense; can be positive or neutral without the desperate edge
- hungry for
similar intensity but a different metaphor ('hungry for power')
- desperate for
stronger and more urgent, implying near-panic
- avid
formal; suggests enthusiastic interest rather than desperate need
- indifferent
not caring about something
- uninterested
lacking any desire
文法句型
thirsty for + [abstract noun: power / knowledge / wealth / fame / revenge]
用法筆記
Almost always followed by the preposition 'for' and an abstract noun (power, knowledge, fame, revenge, wealth, control). Unlike sense 1, this sense is rarely used without 'for + noun'.
常見錯誤
3. wanting attention, approval, or admiration so strongly that one's behaviour appe
wanting attention, approval, or admiration so strongly that one's behaviour appears obvious or desperate — often used about social-media posts that seem designed to attract likes, comments, or compliments.
Nia posted the same photo on three platforms, and her roommate joked she looked thirsty for likes.
look thirsty — appearance of desperation
The actor's publicist warned that too many shirtless selfies made him seem thirsty for attention.
Some influencers post staged arguments in their comments sections, which many viewers find thirsty and fake.
Jude kept tagging celebrities in his travel photos, which struck followers as a bit thirsty.
- desperate
broader and stronger; can apply outside social media
- needy
similar negative judgement but about emotional dependence, not specifically online
- attention-hungry
more direct and literal; same register
文法句型
thirsty for + [social approval noun: attention / likes / validation / followers]
用法筆記
This sense is informal and primarily used in digital/social-media contexts. It carries a negative or mocking tone — calling someone 'thirsty' implies their need for approval is painfully obvious.
常見錯誤
4. dry and cracked from having no water for a long time — used for land, soil, fiel
dry and cracked from having no water for a long time — used for land, soil, fields, or plants that desperately need rain or watering.
After three months without rain, the thirsty farmland had cracked open under the relentless sun.
The gardener watered the thirsty plants every morning during the heatwave to stop them from wilting.
thirsty plants — living things needing water
Rain fell on the thirsty soil, and the dry ground soaked it all up within minutes.
Farmers watched their thirsty fields and prayed for a storm that would break the drought.
- waterlogged
having too much water
- moist
pleasantly slightly wet
用法筆記
Used for land, soil, fields, crops, and plants — not usually for individual small objects. More poetic or descriptive than simply saying 'dry'.