driest

Multiple Entries:
  driest    dry  

Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
driest
adjective superlative of dry.

Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
dry/drʌɪ/
adjective (drier, driest)
  • 1 free from moisture or liquid.

    ■ not yielding water, oil, or milk: a dry well.

    ■ without grease or other moisturizer or lubricator: dry hair.

  • 2 (of information, writing, etc.) dully factual.

    ■ unemotional or undemonstrative.

  • 3 (of humour) subtle and expressed in a matter-of-fact way.
  • 4 prohibiting the sale or consumption of alcoholic drink.

    ■ no longer drinking alcohol.

  • 5 (of wine) not sweet.
verb (dries, drying, dried)
  • 1 become or make dry.

    ■ (usu. as adj. dried) preserve by evaporating the moisture from: dried milk.

  • 2 (dry up) (of a supply or flow) decrease and stop.
  • 3 theatrical slang forget one's lines.

    ■ (dry up) informal cease talking.

  • 4 (dry out) informal overcome alcoholism.
noun (pl. dries or drys)
  • 1 (the dry) chiefly Austral. the dry season.

    ■ a tract of waterless country.

  • 2 Brit. a Conservative politician (especially in the 1980s) in favour of strict monetarist policies.
  • 3 US a person in favour of the prohibition of alcohol.
– phrases
come up dry N. Amer. informal be unsuccessful.
– derivatives
dryish adjective,
dryness noun.
– origin OE drȳge (adj.), drȳgan (v.), of Gmc origin.
'driest' also found in these Oxford entries:

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