watery

English

Etymology

From Middle English watery, wattry, from Old English wæteriġ, wætriġ (watery), from Proto-Germanic *watrīgaz (watery), equivalent to water + -y. Cognate with West Frisian wetterich (watery), Dutch waterig (watery, aqueous), German Low German waterig (wet, damp, moist), German wässerig, wässrig (watery).

Adjective

watery (comparative waterier, superlative wateriest)

  1. Wet, soggy or soaked with water.
    • 2013 January 1, Nancy Langston, “The Fraught History of a Watery World”, in American Scientist, volume 101, number 1, page 59:
      European adventurers found themselves within a watery world, a tapestry of streams, channels, wetlands, lakes and lush riparian meadows enriched by floodwaters from the Mississippi River.
  2. Diluted or having too much water.
  3. (of light) Thin and pale therefore suggestive of water.
  4. Weak and insipid.
    • 2012 August 21, Jason Heller, “The Darkness: Hot Cakes (Music Review)”, in The Onion AV Club:
      When the album succeeds, such as on the swaggering, Queen-esque “Nothing’s Gonna Stop Us,” it does so on The Darkness’ own terms—that is, as a random ’80s-cliché generator. But with so many tired, lazy callbacks to its own threadbare catalog (including “Love Is Not The Answer,” a watery echo of the epic “I Believe In A Thing Called Love” from 2003’s Permission To Land), Hot Cakes marks the point where The Darkness has stopped cannibalizing the golden age of stadium rock and simply started cannibalizing itself. And, despite Hawkins’ inveterate crotch-grabbing, there was never that much meat there to begin with.
  5. Discharging water or similar substance as a result of disease etc.
  6. Tearful.

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