soapy
English
Etymology
From soap + -y. Compare German Low German sepig (“soapy”), German seifig (“soapy”), Swedish såpig (“soapy”).
Pronunciation
Adjective
soapy (comparative soapier, superlative soapiest)
- Literal senses:
- Resembling soap.
- Bases dissolve skin oils and have a soapy feel to them.
- Full of soap.
- The dishwasher uses hot soapy water to clean the dishes and silverware.
- Covered in soap.
- His skin was still soapy after the shower.
- Resembling soap.
- (television) Resembling a soap opera.
- 2021 September 22, Caroline Siede, “Dear Evan Hansen is a misfire on just about every level”, in AV Club:
- The heightened worlds of darkly comedic satire and soapy high-school romance make it easy enough to roll with unrealistic casting choices—and that goes for stage musicals, too, where some level of artifice is built into the format.
- 2023 November 16, Lucy Mangan, “The Crown season 6 review – so bad it’s basically an out-of-body experience”, in The Guardian, →ISSN:
- This Diana-obsessed series is the very definition of bad writing. Despite the brilliant cast, it’s a crass, soapy dive into the abyss – not least in the atrocious scenes featuring Ghost Diana[.]
- (dated) Committing or involving flattery.
Translations
resembling soap
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full of soap
covered in soap
resembling a soap opera
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- The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout § Translations.
Translations to be checked
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Anagrams
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