sponge
sponge [sponge sponges sponged sponging spongeing] noun, verb BrE [spʌndʒ] NAmE [spʌndʒ] noun 1. countable a piece of artificial or natural material that is soft and light and full of holes and can hold water easily, used for washing or cleaning •a bath sponge (= to wash your body with in the bath) • (figurative)His mind was like a sponge, ready to absorb anything. 2. uncountable artificial sponge used for filling furniture, ↑cushions, etc. 3. countable a simple sea creature with a light body full of holes, from which natural sponge is obtained 4. countable, uncountable (BrE) = ↑sponge cake •a chocolate sponge Word Origin: Old English (in sense 1 of the noun), via Latin from Greek spongia, later form of spongos, reinforced in Middle English by Old French esponge. Example Bank: •Wipe the surface with a damp sponge. verb 1. transitive ~ sb/yourself/sth (down) to wash sb/yourself/sth with a wet cloth or ↑sponge Syn: ↑wipe •She sponged his hot face. •Take your jacket off and I'll sponge it down with water. 2. transitive ~ sth + adv./prep. to remove sth using a wet cloth or ↑sponge Syn: ↑wash •We tried to sponge the blood off my shirt. 3. intransitive ~ (off/on sb) (informal, disapproving)to get money, food, etc. regularly from other people without doing anything for them or offering to pay Syn: ↑scrounge •He spent his life sponging off his relatives. Verb forms: Word Origin: Old English (in sense 1 of the noun), via Latin from Greek spongia, later form of spongos, reinforced in Middle English by Old French esponge. Example Bank: •Take your jacket off and I'll sponge it down with water.
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