watery
watery — adjective
1. containing a noticeable amount of water, or soaked through with water
containing a noticeable amount of water, or soaked through with water
After the storm, a watery layer of mud covered the garden path.
watery layer — describes a thin covering of water mixed with dirt
Eshe's eyes became watery as she sliced the fresh onions.
watery eyes — describes body fluids (tears)
A watery liquid dripped from the broken pipe and spread across the garage floor.
The soil near the river felt moist and watery under Christopher's boots.
Mateo wiped the watery mixture off the kitchen counter with a sponge.
- wet
more general term; describes any surface or object covered with liquid
- soggy
suggests something has absorbed water and become soft or heavy, often unpleasant
- waterlogged
stronger, implies saturation to the point of being heavy or unusable
用法筆記
The subject is usually a liquid, a body fluid such as tears, or a surface that is visibly wet. Distinguish from sense 2 (WEAK TASTE), which is limited to food and drink.
常見錯誤
2. having too much water added, so the natural flavour is lost or becomes very mild
having too much water added, so the natural flavour is lost or becomes very mild
Noa poured the watery soup back into the pot to add more seasoning.
watery soup — describes food with too much water and weak flavour
The coffee was so watery that Quinn could see the bottom of the white cup.
so watery that — emphasises the degree of dilution
The orange juice tasted watery after Emre dropped ice cubes into the glass.
Hoa stirred the watery sauce and added flour to make it thicker.
Emily added salt and pepper to the watery stew, but it still lacked flavour.
- strong
having a rich, intense flavour
- thick
having a dense, heavy consistency
- concentrated
not diluted; full-strength
用法筆記
Only applies to food and drink. Commonly used with soup, coffee, sauce, juice, stew — any edible item whose expected taste has been lost through dilution.
常見錯誤
3. lacking strength or depth of colour, so that the shade appears pale, thin, or fa
lacking strength or depth of colour, so that the shade appears pale, thin, or faded — for example, weak sunlight on a grey day, or paint that has been thinned too much
A watery winter sun hung low in the grey sky all afternoon.
watery sun — describes weak, pale sunlight
Saira mixed too much water into the paint and ended up with a watery blue.
The watery afternoon light made the old living room feel cold and empty.
Ryo's drawing used watery colours that were barely visible on the white paper.
A patch of watery blue sky appeared between the dark clouds for a moment.
- pale
most common alternative; can describe any colour lacking depth
- washed-out
informal; suggests colour has faded from its original intensity
- faint
very weak in colour, almost not visible
用法筆記
Applies mainly to sunlight, sky colours, and paint. The meaning extends the physical idea of watery (thin, lacking substance) into the domain of visual intensity. Does not describe fabric colours — use 'pale' or 'faded' instead.