plash
Meanings
noun
- A small pool of standing water; a marshy pond; also, a puddle; (uncountable) marshy land; mire.
noun
- A sound made by something hitting the surface of water or some other liquid, or by water or some other liquid hitting something; also, an act causing this sound; a splash.
- A heavy fall of rain; a downpour.
- A splash of light on a surface.
verb
- To hit (someone or something) with water or some other liquid, causing a splashing sound; to splash.
- To splash or sprinkle (a surface, such as a wall) with a liquid colouring matter.
- To agitate or plunge into (water or some other liquid), causing it to splash.
- To hit the surface of water or some other liquid, causing a splashing sound; also, to move in water with a splashing sound; to splash.
- Of water or some other liquid: to hit something, or to move about, with a splashing sound; to splash.
- To hit someone or something with water or some other liquid, causing a splashing sound.
intj
- Used to represent the sound made by something hitting the surface of water or some other liquid, or by water or some other liquid hitting something.
verb
- Synonym of pleach (“to make or repair (a hedge) by partly cutting plant stems, bending them down, and intertwining them with other stems”).
- To bend down and intertwine (branches or stems of plants, etc.) to make or repair a hedge.
- To bend down (a bush, tree, or other plant).
- To intertwine (branches or stems of plants) on a trellis; to trellis; also, to train (a tree or other plant) to grow against a wall; to espalier.
- To intertwine (branches, flowers, etc.) together; to interweave.
- To intertwine branches or stems of plants of (a wood) to block a passage for defensive purposes.
noun
- A plant stem which has been partly cut, bent down, and intertwined with other stems to make or repair a hedge; also, a bush, hedge, etc., which has been pleached in this manner; a pleach.
Pronunciation
Word forms
Etymology
From Middle English plasch, plasche, plash, plashe (“pool of standing water, marshy place; torrent of water (?)”), from Late Old English plæsċ, plesċ (“pool; puddle”), probably from Proto-West Germanic *plask (“pool”); further etymology unknown, probably ultimately onomatopoeic, referring to the sound of splashing. cognates * German platschen (“to splash”) * Middle Dutch plasch, plas (“pool”) (modern Dutch plas (“pool, watering hole”), plassen (“to splash, splatter”); Middle French plache (“pool”), plascq (“damp meadow”); Anglo-Norman plasseis (“marshes”, plural)) * West Frisian plaskje (“to splash, splatter”)
Synonyms
Derived words
This entry uses open data from Wiktionary (CC BY-SA/GFDL). Word forms are used for search and are not indexed as separate pages.