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3 definitions found
From:
DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典
wringing
(
a
.)淋溼的,濕透的
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Wring
v. t.
[
imp. &
p
. p.
Wrung
Obs
.
Wringed
p.
pr
. &
vb
. n.
Wringing
.]
1.
To
twist
and
compress
;
to
turn
and
strain
with
violence
;
to
writhe
;
to
squeeze
hard
;
to
pinch
;
as
,
to
wring
clothes
in
washing
.
“Earnestly
wringing
Waverley's
hand.”
--
Sir
W
.
Scott
.
“
Wring
him
by
the
nose.”
--
Shak
.
[His
steed
]
so
sweat
that
men
might
him
wring
.
--
Chaucer
.
The
king
began
to
find
where
his
shoe
did
wring
him
.
--
Bacon
.
The
priest
shall
bring
it
[
a
dove
]
unto
the
altar
,
and
wring
off
his
head
.
--
Lev
.
i
. 15.
2.
Hence
,
to
pain
;
to
distress
;
to
torment
;
to
torture
.
Too
much
grieved
and
wrung
by
an
uneasy
and
strait
fortune
.
--
Clarendon
.
Didst
thou
taste
but
half
the
griefs
That
wring
my
soul
,
thou
couldst
not
talk
thus
coldly
. --
Addison
.
3.
To
distort
;
to
pervert
;
to
wrest
.
How
dare
men
thus
wring
the
Scriptures?
--
Whitgift
.
4.
To
extract
or
obtain
by
twisting
and
compressing
;
to
squeeze
or
press
(
out
);
hence
,
to
extort
;
to
draw
forth
by
violence
,
or
against
resistance
or
repugnance
; --
usually
with
out
or
form
.
Your
overkindness
doth
wring
tears
from
me
.
--
Shak
.
He
rose
up
early
on
the
morrow
,
and
thrust
the
fleece
together
,
and
wringed
the
dew
out
of
the
fleece
.
--
Judg
.
vi
. 38.
5.
To
subject
to
extortion
;
to
afflict
,
or
oppress
,
in
order
to
enforce
compliance
.
To
wring
the
widow
from
her
'
customed
right
.
--
Shak
.
The
merchant
adventures
have
been
often
wronged
and
wringed
to
the
quick
.
--
Hayward
.
6.
Naut.
To
bend
or
strain
out
of
its
position
;
as
,
to
wring
a
mast
.
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Wring·ing
,
a. & n.
from
Wring
,
v.
Wringing machine
,
a
wringer
.
See
Wringer
, 2.
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