Slake vs Unslaked - What's the difference?
slake | unslaked |
*Sir (c.1569-1626)
*:When the body's strongest sinews slake .
*:
*:wherfor the quene waxed wroth with sir Launcelot / and vpon a day she called sir launcelot vnto her chamber and saide thus / Sir launcelot I see and fele dayly that thy loue begynneth to slake / for thou hast no Ioye to be in my presence / but euer thou arte oute of thys Courte
To go out; to become extinct.
*(Thomas Browne) (1605-1682)
*:His flame did slake .
(label) To satisfy (thirst, or other desires); to quench; to extinguish.
*
*(William Shakespeare) (c.1564–1616)
*:It could not slake mine ire nor ease my heart.
*(Edmund Spenser) (c.1552–1599)
*:slake the heavenly fire
(label) To cool (something) with water or another liquid.
*1961 , (Lawrence Durrell), , p.14:
*:Notes for landscape tones. Long sequences of tempera. Light filtered through the essence of lemons. An air full of brick-dust - sweet smelling brick dust and the odour of hot pavements slaked with water.
(label) To become mixed with water, so that a true chemical combination takes place.
:
(label) To mix with water, so that a true chemical combination takes place.
:
Not yet slaked
* 1798 , Samuel Taylor Coleridge, "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner":
*{{quote-news, year=1988, date=April 8, author=Tom Boeker, title=The Duchess of Malfi, work=Chicago Reader
, passage=His blood lust yet unslaked (pardon the pun), the duke has the duchess executed
As a verb slake
is .As an adjective unslaked is
not yet slaked.slake
English
Verb
(slak)Derived terms
* slaked * slake troughAnagrams
* * *unslaked
English
Adjective
(-)- With throats unslaked , with black lips baked: / We could not laugh nor wail.
citation