
drizzle ●●●●○



ESL CEFR | B1
driz‧zle /ˈdrɪzəl/ verb
drizzle noun [singular, uncountable]
نم نم باران
نم نم باریدن، ریز باریدن، معماری: نرمه باران، زیست شناسی: ریزبار
▼ ادامه توضیحات دیکشنری؛ پس از بنر تبلیغاتی ▼
Synonyms & Related Wordsdrizzle[noun]Synonyms:- fine rain, Scotch mist
[verb]Synonyms:- rain, shower, spot
or spit with rain, spray, sprinkle
English Thesaurus: beat, defeat, trounce, thrash, wipe the floor with somebody, ... [TahlilGaran] English Synonym Dictionary ▲
English DictionaryI. driz‧zle1 /ˈdrɪz
əl/
verb[
Date: 1500-1600;
Origin: Perhaps from Old English dreosan 'to fall']
1. it is drizzling if it is drizzling, light rain and mist come out of the sky:
The rain isn’t too bad – it’s only drizzling.2. [transitive always + adverb/preposition] to let a liquid fall on food in a small stream or in small drops:
Drizzle the soy sauce over the chicken. [TahlilGaran] Dictionary of Contemporary English ▲
II. drizzle2 noun [singular, uncountable] weather that is a combination of light rain and mist:
A light drizzle had started by the time we left.—driz‧zly /ˈdrɪzli/
adjective [TahlilGaran] Dictionary of Contemporary English ▲
Collocationsdrizzle noun ADJ. fine, light, thin | steady | patchy DRIZZLE + VERB fall Light drizzle fell all afternoon. PREP. in/through a/the ~ We walked home through the drizzle. [TahlilGaran] Collocations Dictionary ▲
Thesaurusbeat to get more points, votes etc than someone.
Beat is used especially in spoken English:
We should have beaten them easily.
I always beat my brother at tennis.defeat to beat someone.
Defeat is more formal than
beat and is used especially in writing:
England were defeated by 2 goals to 1.
Bush defeated Kerry in the election.trounce /traʊns/ to defeat someone completely in a game:
They were trounced 20–0 by Kuwait.thrash British English informal,
cream American English informal to beat someone very easily in a game:
Of course, they totally creamed the other team.
I hope we thrash them!wipe the floor with somebody informal to beat someone completely in a game or argument:
She wiped the floor with her opponent in the debate.
They won a £1,000 prize after wiping the floor with the opposition in a bowling competition.grate to cut cheese, carrot etc into small pieces by rubbing it against a special tool:
Grate the cheese and sprinkle it over the top of the pasta.melt to make butter, chocolate etc become liquid:
Melt the butter, chocolate, and 1 teaspoon of cream over a low heat.sieve British English,
sift American English to put flour or other powders through a
sieve (=tool like a net made of wire, which you use for removing larger grains or pieces):
Sift the flour and cocoa before adding to the rest of the mixture.chop to cut something into pieces, especially using a big knife:
Chop up the vegetables.dice to cut vegetables or meat into small square pieces:
Dice the carrots and then fry them in butter.season to add salt, pepper etc to food:
Season the meat before grilling.crush to use a lot of force to break something such as seeds into very small pieces or into a powder:
Add one clove of crushed garlic.mix to combine different foods together:
Mix together all the ingredients in one bowl.beat/whisk to mix food together quickly with a fork or other tool:
Whisk the egg whites until they form soft peaks.stir to turn food around with a spoon:
Stir the sauce gently to prevent burning.fold something in to gently mix another substance into a mixture:
Fold in the beaten egg whites.knead to press
dough (=a mixture of flour and water) many times with your hands when you are making bread:
Knead the dough for ten minutes, until smooth.drizzle to slowly pour a small amount of a liquid onto something:
Drizzle with olive oil.let something stand to leave something somewhere, before you do something else with it:
Let the mixture stand for a couple of hours so that it cools naturally.serve to put different foods together as part of a meal:
Serve with rice and a salad.
Serve the aubergines on a bed of lettuce.tired feeling that you want to sleep or rest:
I was really tired the next day.
the tired faces of the childrenexhausted extremely tired:
I was exhausted after the long trip home.
He sat down, exhausted.
She immediately fell into an exhausted sleep.worn out [not before noun] very tired because you have been working hard:
With three small children to care for, she was always worn out.weary /ˈwɪəri $ ˈwɪr-/
written tired because you have been travelling, worrying, or doing something for a long time:
weary travellers
a weary sigh
He looks tired and weary after 20 years in office.fatigued formal very tired:
They were too fatigued to continue with the climb.
Because of her illness, she often became fatigued.drained [not before noun] very tired and feeling as if all your energy has gone:
Afterwards, he felt drained, both physically and mentally.bushed/beat [not before noun] informal very tired:
I’m bushed. I think I’ll go to bed early.
I’m beat. I don’t think I’ll go for a run tonight.knackered British English,
pooped American English [not before noun] informal very tired.
Knackered is a very informal use - do not use it in polite conversation:
By the time I got home I was absolutely knackered.shattered [not before noun] British English informal extremely tired:
When I first started teaching, I came home shattered every night.dead spoken extremely tired, so that you cannot do anything but sleep:
I was absolutely dead by the time I got home. [TahlilGaran] English Thesaurus ▲
cut to divide something into two or more pieces, especially using a knife or
scissors:
Do you want me to cut the cake?
He cut off the lower branches.snip to quickly cut something, especially using
scissors:
I snipped the label off.
The hairdresser snipped away at her hair.slit to make a long narrow cut through something, especially using a knife:
He slit the envelope open with a penknife.
She slit through the plastic covering.slash to cut something quickly and violently with a knife, making a long thin cut:
Someone had slashed the tyres on his car.
He tried to slash his wrists.saw to cut wood, using a
saw (=a tool with a row of sharp points):
Saw the wood to the correct length.chop to cut wood, vegetables, or meat into pieces:
Bill was outside chopping up firewood with an axe.
They chopped down the old tree.
finely chopped onionslice to cut bread, meat, or vegetables into thin pieces:
I’ll slice the cucumber.
Slice the bread thinly.dice to cut vegetables or meat into small square pieces:
First dice the apple into cubes.grate to cut cheese or a hard vegetable by rubbing it against a special tool:
Grate the cheese and sprinkle it over the vegetables.peel to cut the outside part off something such as a potato or apple:
I peeled the potatoes and put them in a saucepan.carve to cut thin pieces from a large piece of meat:
Uncle Ray carved the turkey.mow to cut the grass in a garden, park etc:
A gardener was mowing the lawn.trim (
also clip) to cut a small amount off something, especially to make it look neater:
He was trimming his beard.
Trim the excess fat off the meat.melt to make butter, chocolate etc become liquid:
Melt the butter, chocolate, and 1 teaspoon of cream over a low heat.sieve British English,
sift American English to put flour or other powders through a
sieve (=tool like a net made of wire, which you use for removing larger grains or pieces):
Sift the flour and cocoa before adding to the rest of the mixture.season to add salt, pepper etc to food:
Season the meat before grilling.crush to use a lot of force to break something such as seeds into very small pieces or into a powder:
Add one clove of crushed garlic.mix to combine different foods together:
Mix together all the ingredients in one bowl.beat/whisk to mix food together quickly with a fork or other tool:
Whisk the egg whites until they form soft peaks.stir to turn food around with a spoon:
Stir the sauce gently to prevent burning.fold something in to gently mix another substance into a mixture:
Fold in the beaten egg whites.knead to press
dough (=a mixture of flour and water) many times with your hands when you are making bread:
Knead the dough for ten minutes, until smooth.drizzle to slowly pour a small amount of a liquid onto something:
Drizzle with olive oil.let something stand to leave something somewhere, before you do something else with it:
Let the mixture stand for a couple of hours so that it cools naturally.serve to put different foods together as part of a meal:
Serve with rice and a salad.
Serve the aubergines on a bed of lettuce. [TahlilGaran] English Thesaurus ▲
grate to cut cheese, carrot etc into small pieces by rubbing it against a special tool:
Grate the cheese and sprinkle it over the top of the pasta.melt to make butter, chocolate etc become liquid:
Melt the butter, chocolate, and 1 teaspoon of cream over a low heat.sieve British English,
sift American English to put flour or other powders through a
sieve (=tool like a net made of wire, which you use for removing larger grains or pieces):
Sift the flour and cocoa before adding to the rest of the mixture.chop to cut something into pieces, especially using a big knife:
Chop up the vegetables.dice to cut vegetables or meat into small square pieces:
Dice the carrots and then fry them in butter.season to add salt, pepper etc to food:
Season the meat before grilling.crush to use a lot of force to break something such as seeds into very small pieces or into a powder:
Add one clove of crushed garlic.mix to combine different foods together:
Mix together all the ingredients in one bowl.beat/whisk to mix food together quickly with a fork or other tool:
Whisk the egg whites until they form soft peaks.stir to turn food around with a spoon:
Stir the sauce gently to prevent burning.fold something in to gently mix another substance into a mixture:
Fold in the beaten egg whites.knead to press
dough (=a mixture of flour and water) many times with your hands when you are making bread:
Knead the dough for ten minutes, until smooth.drizzle to slowly pour a small amount of a liquid onto something:
Drizzle with olive oil.let something stand to leave something somewhere, before you do something else with it:
Let the mixture stand for a couple of hours so that it cools naturally.serve to put different foods together as part of a meal:
Serve with rice and a salad.
Serve the aubergines on a bed of lettuce.cut to divide something into two or more pieces, especially using a knife or
scissors:
Do you want me to cut the cake?
He cut off the lower branches.snip to quickly cut something, especially using
scissors:
I snipped the label off.
The hairdresser snipped away at her hair.slit to make a long narrow cut through something, especially using a knife:
He slit the envelope open with a penknife.
She slit through the plastic covering.slash to cut something quickly and violently with a knife, making a long thin cut:
Someone had slashed the tyres on his car.
He tried to slash his wrists.saw to cut wood, using a
saw (=a tool with a row of sharp points):
Saw the wood to the correct length.slice to cut bread, meat, or vegetables into thin pieces:
I’ll slice the cucumber.
Slice the bread thinly.peel to cut the outside part off something such as a potato or apple:
I peeled the potatoes and put them in a saucepan.carve to cut thin pieces from a large piece of meat:
Uncle Ray carved the turkey.mow to cut the grass in a garden, park etc:
A gardener was mowing the lawn.trim (
also clip) to cut a small amount off something, especially to make it look neater:
He was trimming his beard.
Trim the excess fat off the meat. [TahlilGaran] English Thesaurus ▲
mix to put different substances or liquids together so that they can no longer be separated:
Mix yellow and blue paint to make green.
This cake is really easy – you just mix everything together in the bowl.
Concrete is made by mixing gravel with sand, cement, and water.combine to mix things together so that they form a single substance.
Combine is more formal than
mix:
Combine the flour and the eggs.
Steel is produced by combining iron with carbon.stir to move a spoon or stick around in a liquid, a pan etc, especially when you are mixing things together:
Keep stirring until the sauce becomes thicker.
Stir the sugar into the warm milk.
Stir the paint before you use it.blend to mix together soft or liquid substances to form a single smooth substance:
Blend the yogurt with fresh fruit for a great drink.beat to mix food together quickly and thoroughly using a fork or kitchen tool – used especially about eggs:
Beat the eggs and add them to the milk and flour.whisk to mix foods that are soft or liquid very quickly so that air is mixed in, using a fork or special tool:
Whisk the egg whites until they form soft peaks.dilute to mix a liquid with water in order to make it weaker:
Dilute the bleach with two parts water to one part bleach.fuse to combine different styles in order to form a new style:
The band fuses African rhythms with traditional Celtic music.jumble to mix things together in an untidy way, so that they are not in any order:
The jigsaw pieces were all jumbled together in the box.grate to cut cheese, carrot etc into small pieces by rubbing it against a special tool:
Grate the cheese and sprinkle it over the top of the pasta.melt to make butter, chocolate etc become liquid:
Melt the butter, chocolate, and 1 teaspoon of cream over a low heat.sieve British English,
sift American English to put flour or other powders through a
sieve (=tool like a net made of wire, which you use for removing larger grains or pieces):
Sift the flour and cocoa before adding to the rest of the mixture.chop to cut something into pieces, especially using a big knife:
Chop up the vegetables.dice to cut vegetables or meat into small square pieces:
Dice the carrots and then fry them in butter.season to add salt, pepper etc to food:
Season the meat before grilling.crush to use a lot of force to break something such as seeds into very small pieces or into a powder:
Add one clove of crushed garlic.beat/whisk to mix food together quickly with a fork or other tool:
Whisk the egg whites until they form soft peaks.fold something in to gently mix another substance into a mixture:
Fold in the beaten egg whites.knead to press
dough (=a mixture of flour and water) many times with your hands when you are making bread:
Knead the dough for ten minutes, until smooth.drizzle to slowly pour a small amount of a liquid onto something:
Drizzle with olive oil.let something stand to leave something somewhere, before you do something else with it:
Let the mixture stand for a couple of hours so that it cools naturally.serve to put different foods together as part of a meal:
Serve with rice and a salad.
Serve the aubergines on a bed of lettuce. [TahlilGaran] English Thesaurus ▲
mix to put different substances or liquids together so that they can no longer be separated:
Mix yellow and blue paint to make green.
This cake is really easy – you just mix everything together in the bowl.
Concrete is made by mixing gravel with sand, cement, and water.combine to mix things together so that they form a single substance.
Combine is more formal than
mix:
Combine the flour and the eggs.
Steel is produced by combining iron with carbon.stir to move a spoon or stick around in a liquid, a pan etc, especially when you are mixing things together:
Keep stirring until the sauce becomes thicker.
Stir the sugar into the warm milk.
Stir the paint before you use it.blend to mix together soft or liquid substances to form a single smooth substance:
Blend the yogurt with fresh fruit for a great drink.beat to mix food together quickly and thoroughly using a fork or kitchen tool – used especially about eggs:
Beat the eggs and add them to the milk and flour.whisk to mix foods that are soft or liquid very quickly so that air is mixed in, using a fork or special tool:
Whisk the egg whites until they form soft peaks.dilute to mix a liquid with water in order to make it weaker:
Dilute the bleach with two parts water to one part bleach.grate to cut cheese, carrot etc into small pieces by rubbing it against a special tool:
Grate the cheese and sprinkle it over the top of the pasta.melt to make butter, chocolate etc become liquid:
Melt the butter, chocolate, and 1 teaspoon of cream over a low heat.sieve British English,
sift American English to put flour or other powders through a
sieve (=tool like a net made of wire, which you use for removing larger grains or pieces):
Sift the flour and cocoa before adding to the rest of the mixture.chop to cut something into pieces, especially using a big knife:
Chop up the vegetables.dice to cut vegetables or meat into small square pieces:
Dice the carrots and then fry them in butter.season to add salt, pepper etc to food:
Season the meat before grilling.crush to use a lot of force to break something such as seeds into very small pieces or into a powder:
Add one clove of crushed garlic.beat/whisk to mix food together quickly with a fork or other tool:
Whisk the egg whites until they form soft peaks.fold something in to gently mix another substance into a mixture:
Fold in the beaten egg whites.knead to press
dough (=a mixture of flour and water) many times with your hands when you are making bread:
Knead the dough for ten minutes, until smooth.drizzle to slowly pour a small amount of a liquid onto something:
Drizzle with olive oil.let something stand to leave something somewhere, before you do something else with it:
Let the mixture stand for a couple of hours so that it cools naturally.serve to put different foods together as part of a meal:
Serve with rice and a salad.
Serve the aubergines on a bed of lettuce. [TahlilGaran] English Thesaurus ▲
rain noun [uncountable] water that falls in small drops from clouds in the sky:
The rain has stopped at last.
There had been heavy rain during the night.drizzle noun [uncountable] light rain with very small drops of water:
A light drizzle was falling as I left the house.shower noun [countable] a short period of rain that can be heavy or light:
More heavy showers are forecast for tonight.
a light shower of raindownpour noun [countable usually singular] a short period of very heavy rain that starts suddenly:
A sudden downpour sent us running for shelter.
a torrential downpourhail noun [uncountable] frozen rain that falls in the form of
hailstones
(=small balls of ice):
The hail and high winds have destroyed many of the county’s crops.sleet noun [uncountable] a mixture of snow and rain:
The rain had turned to sleet
Sleet and snow fell.the rains noun [plural] heavy rain that falls during a particular period in the year in tropical countries:
The farmers are waiting for the rains to come.monsoon noun [countable ] the heavy rain that falls between April and October in India and other southern Asian countries:
The monsoon is late this year.
the monsoon seasonit rains heavily/hard (=a lot of water comes down)
It was raining heavily when we arrived in New York.it rains non-stop/solidly/steadily (=without stopping)
It rained solidly every single day.it rains slightly/lightly (=a little water comes down)
It’s raining slightly, but we can still go out.it starts raining/it starts to rain
It had started to rain again.it stops raining
Has it stopped raining?it is raining cats and dogs informal (=it is raining very hard – this phrase sounds rather old-fashioned)it’s raining drops of water are falling from the sky:
It’s raining – you’d better take an umbrella.it’s pouring (down) British English,
it’s pouring (rain) American English it is raining very heavily:
We stayed at home because it was pouring down all day.it’s chucking it down British English informal it is raining very heavily:
Outside it was chucking it down and the streets were deserted.it’s drizzling very gentle rain is falling:
It’s only drizzling – let’s go for a walk anyway.it’s hailing frozen rain in the form of small balls of ice are falling:
It had been hailing and the roads were still slippery. [TahlilGaran] English Thesaurus ▲