[
UK
/sˈəʊp/
]
[ US /ˈsoʊp/ ]
[ US /ˈsoʊp/ ]
VERB
- rub soap all over, usually with the purpose of cleaning
NOUN
- money offered as a bribe
- street names for gamma hydroxybutyrate
- a cleansing agent made from the salts of vegetable or animal fats
How To Use soap In A Sentence
- I have sprayed them a couple of times with soapy water, which kills some of them but doesn't harm beneficial insects like ladybirds.
- Or did her pushy mother and absent father turn her life into a sordid soap opera? Times, Sunday Times
- Tru hung her gown away safely, then tore off her sweat-soaked uniform before she sloshed water all over her body, scrubbing away her stench with soap.
- It would free us up time to get on with scrubbing ourselves with carbolic soap…
- So asking them to use mild soaps and weaning them away from perfumes and deodorants is our primary task,’ he said.
- On the sidewalk Soapy began to yell drunken gibberish at the top of his harsh voice.
- Even when the fountain was working properly it was frequently full of soap suds or discoloured because someone had put something into the water.
- I don't usually watch this soap but on Monday the characters very neatly recapped the last two years of their lives and allowed me to enjoy the high drama without having invested anything at all.
- Soap destroys the cell walls of bacteria.
- Much of recent news coverage is sensationalized like soap operas.