Search for crossword answers and clues
Quench one's thirst
Answer for the clue "Quench one's thirst ", 5 letters:
slake
Alternative clues for the word slake
Word definitions for slake in dictionaries
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Slake \Slake\, v. i. To go out; to become extinct. ``His flame did slake.'' --Sir T. Browne. To abate; to become less decided. [R.] --Shak. To slacken; to become relaxed. ``When the body's strongest sinews slake.'' [R.] --Sir J. ...
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
verb COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS ■ NOUN thirst ▪ Before continuing we slaked thirsts with warm water from our own bottles - we couldn't find any streams. ▪ We chewed salted sunflower seeds, and slaked our thirst . ▪ It is diverted hundreds of miles along aqueducts ...
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
vb. 1 (label en intransitive obsolete) Of a person: to become less energetic, to slacken in one's efforts. (11 th -17 th c.) 2 (label en intransitive obsolete) To slacken; to become relaxed or loose. (11 th -16 th c.) 3 (label en intransitive obsolete) ...
Usage examples of slake.
They smoked for a while then Billy Anker, casting around for something to slake his thirst, drank the rosewater from the bedside dish.
No sooner did the men who came to the house hear that I was a maid than they longed to slake their brutal lust upon me, offering me gold if I would submit to their caresses.
Between each gingall was a small hole in the parapet which held an earthen vessel filled with slaked lime, ready to be flung in the faces of an enemy attempting to escalade the walls.
June day, and meseems I know thy lack, and the slaking of it lieth somewhat nearer than Hampton under Scaur, which we shall not reach these two days if we go afoot all the way.
He suspected the pucka lees were still back with the baggage, which would mean a three-mile walk and, by the time he had found them, the battalion would have slaked its thirst from the wells in the village.
I hardly need say that I had never in my life suffered from the crippling Christian vice of pudicity, nor had I been abstemious of sexual appetite, nor had I been lacking for opportunities to slake that appetite.
Paris has been added with the object of suppressing the action of slaking and inducing quicker setting.
His name sounded from her like a blessing, a cool, soft rush that washed over him like a fresh mountain stream, slaking his thirst, cooling his heat.
The Archipelago was ruled by vicious savages who used their women in common, slaking blood lust and the other kind in orgies of cruelty and debauchery.
When naught but bones remained of the marmots, tossed beside the tiny skins, she reached a small waterskin to him to slake his thirst.
Jim had been led to suppose they would be, on the exterminating effects of lime upon slugs and snails in its different conditions of slaked and unslaked, ground and in the lump.
And how quickly he regained his domineering manner once it was slaked, the falsehearted craven.
All along its narrow length people huddled in their tents and waited for what they had been told would come: the destroyer god, descending to earth to slake his thirst with their blood.
Megalokastro was entirely surrounded by walls and fierce, battlemented towers, which had been built by its Christian masters in the heydey of ancient Venice and had been slaked with Venetian, Turkish and Greek blood.
The water fagies were refilled from the river pool and made ready, either to slake the thirst of fighting men or to quench the flames if the Nguni latched on to the old trick of hurling lighted torches into the laager.