📖 Definitions of "Dry off"
verb
- 1
To become or make dry.
💡 Words with a Similar Meaning to "Dry off"
Found via reverse dictionary — words that share a conceptual meaning.
| Word | Definition |
|---|---|
| dry upverb | (intransitive) To become dry (often of weather); to lose water. |
| dry outverb | (colloquial, ambitransitive, idiomatic) To (cause to) sober up; to cease to be drunk; to quit using drugs or alcohol. |
| fordryverb | (intransitive) To dry up; become dry. |
| desiccateverb | (transitive) To remove moisture from; to dry; (sometimes) to dry to an extreme degree. |
| dehydrate | (transitive) To remove water from; to dry up. |
| updryverb | (intransitive, obsolete) To dry up. |
| drip-drynoun | A clothing item that can be washed and drip-dried. |
| air-dryverb | (transitive) To dry by exposure to the air. |
| towel offverb | (transitive and intransitive) To dry (oneself or another person or thing) completely, using a towel. |
| undrynoun | (rare) Not dry. |
| run dryverb | (figurative) To run out; to be fully consumed; to expire. |
| towelnoun | A cloth used for wiping, especially one used for drying anything wet, such as a person after a bath. |
| roughdryverb | (transitive) In laundry work, to dry without smoothing or ironing. |
| damp-dryverb | To dry something until it is only damp. |
| wet downverb | (transitive) To make (something) wet, especially as a preliminary step in cleaning it. |
| dessicateverb | Misspelling of desiccate. [(transitive) To remove moisture from; to dry; (sometimes) to dry to an extreme degree.] |
| redrynoun | To dry again |
| sun-dryverb | (transitive) To dry in the sun, especially food. |
| drainnoun | (chiefly US, Canada) A conduit allowing liquid to flow out of an otherwise contained volume; a plughole (UK) |
| siccateverb | (transitive, obsolete) To dry. |
Translate “Dry off” into Another Language
Pick a language — the word will be pre-filled in the translator.