soap
Kelime Anlamı :
1. sabun.
2. TV, radyo melodram dizisi.
3. soap opera.
4. sabun sürmek.
5. sabunlamak.
6. sabuk.
7. soap bubble sabun köpüğü.
8. verimsiz.
9. boş.
10. tv/radyo melodram dizisi.
Sahne Örnekleri :
Tanımlar :
1.
A cleansing agent, manufactured in bars, granules, flakes, or liquid form, made from a mixture of the sodium salts of various fatty acids of natural oils and fats.
2. A metallic salt of a fatty acid, as of aluminum or iron.
3. slang money, especially that which is used for bribery.
4. A soap opera.
5. to treat or cover with or as if with soap.
6. informal to softsoap; cajole.
7. slang to bribe.
8. no soap slang not possible or permissible.
9. no soap slang unsuccessful; futile.
2. A metallic salt of a fatty acid, as of aluminum or iron.
3. slang money, especially that which is used for bribery.
4. A soap opera.
5. to treat or cover with or as if with soap.
6. informal to softsoap; cajole.
7. slang to bribe.
8. no soap slang not possible or permissible.
9. no soap slang unsuccessful; futile.
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
1.
A substance able to mix with both oil and water, used for cleaning, often in the form of a solid bar or in liquid form, derived from fats or made synthetically.
2. A soap opera.
3. to apply soap to in washing.
4. to cover with soap as a prank.
5. to be discreet about (a topic).
6. to flatter; to wheedle.
2. A soap opera.
3. to apply soap to in washing.
4. to cover with soap as a prank.
5. to be discreet about (a topic).
6. to flatter; to wheedle.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
1.
A substance which dissolves in water, thus forming a lather, and is used as a cleansing agent. soap is produced by combining fats or oils with alkalies or alkaline earths, usually by boiling, and consists of salts of sodium, potassium, etc., with the fatty acids (oleic, stearic, palmitic, etc.). see the note below, and cf. saponification. by extension, any compound of similar composition or properties, whether used as a cleaning agent or not.
2. to rub or wash over with soap.
3. to flatter; to wheedle.
2. to rub or wash over with soap.
3. to flatter; to wheedle.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English
1.
to rub or treat with soap; apply soap to.
2. to use smooth words to; flatter.
3. in calico-printing, to remove, by means of soap, impurities from (cloth) before bleaching; also, after printing, to remove the thickening used in the color.
4. A chemical compound in common domestic use for washing and cleansing, made by the union of certain fatty acids with a salifiable base.
5. A kind of pomade for coloring the hair.
6. smooth words; persuasion; flattery: more often called soft soap.
7. money secretly used for political purposes.
8. white castile soap, which contains 21 per cent of water, is of a pale grayish-white color, giving no oily stains to paper, free from rancid odor, and entirely soluble in alcohol or water; and
9. marbled castile soap, which is harder and more alkaline, contains 14 per cent. of water, and has veins or streaks of ferruginous matter running through it. formerly also, erroneously, castle-soap; also spanish soap.
10. see def. 3.
11. the fatty matter obtained by adding just enough acid to a soap solution to cause the separation of the fatty acids.
2. to use smooth words to; flatter.
3. in calico-printing, to remove, by means of soap, impurities from (cloth) before bleaching; also, after printing, to remove the thickening used in the color.
4. A chemical compound in common domestic use for washing and cleansing, made by the union of certain fatty acids with a salifiable base.
5. A kind of pomade for coloring the hair.
6. smooth words; persuasion; flattery: more often called soft soap.
7. money secretly used for political purposes.
8. white castile soap, which contains 21 per cent of water, is of a pale grayish-white color, giving no oily stains to paper, free from rancid odor, and entirely soluble in alcohol or water; and
9. marbled castile soap, which is harder and more alkaline, contains 14 per cent. of water, and has veins or streaks of ferruginous matter running through it. formerly also, erroneously, castle-soap; also spanish soap.
10. see def. 3.
11. the fatty matter obtained by adding just enough acid to a soap solution to cause the separation of the fatty acids.
from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia