Idioms for wash

    come out in the wash,
    1. to have a good or satisfactory result; turn out eventually: The situation may look hopeless now, but it will all come out in the wash.
    2. to be revealed; become known.
    wash one's hands of. hand(def 90).

Origin of wash

before 900; Middle English washen (v.), Old English wascan (cognate with Dutch wasschen, German waschen, Old Norse vaska) < Germanic *watskan, equivalent to *wat- (root of water) + *-sk- v. suffix + *-an infinitive suffix

SYNONYMS FOR wash

4 bedew.
5 bathe.
24 ablution, cleansing, bathing.
37 swamp, morass.

OTHER WORDS FROM wash

pre·wash, noun, verb (used with object) re·wash, verb un·der·wash, verb well-washed, adjective

Definition for wash (2 of 3)

Wash
[ wosh, wawsh ]
/ wɒʃ, wɔʃ /

noun

The, a shallow bay of the North Sea, on the coast of E England. 20 miles (32 km) long; 15 miles (24 km) wide.

Definition for wash (3 of 3)

Example sentences from the Web for wash

British Dictionary definitions for wash (1 of 3)

wash
/ (wɒʃ) /

verb

noun

Word Origin for wash

Old English wæscan, waxan; related to Old High German wascan; see water

British Dictionary definitions for wash (2 of 3)

Wash
/ (wɒʃ) /

noun

the Wash a shallow inlet of the North Sea on the E coast of England, between Lincolnshire and Norfolk

British Dictionary definitions for wash (3 of 3)

Wash.

abbreviation for

Washington

Medical definitions for wash

wash
[ wŏsh ]

v.

To cleanse, using water or other liquid, usually with soap, detergent, or bleach, by immersing, dipping, rubbing, or scrubbing.
To make moist or wet.

n.

The act or process of cleansing or washing.
A solution used to cleanse or bathe a part.

Idioms and Phrases with wash

wash