thirsty - Wiktionary, the free dictionary (original) (raw)
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Middle English thirsty, from Old English þurstiġ, from Proto-West Germanic *þurstug. Equivalent to thirst + -y. Cognate with Dutch dorstig, German durstig.
- (General American) enPR: thûrs′tē, IPA(key): /ˈθɝs.ti/
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /ˈθɜːs.ti/
- Rhymes: -ɜː(ɹ)sti
thirsty (comparative thirstier, superlative thirstiest)
a thirsty (1) man
- Needing to drink water or any liquid that can supply water.
Synonyms: see Thesaurus:thirsty
After all that work in the hot sun, I am really thirsty.- 1959 February, “Letters to the Editor: Diggle Water Troughs”, in Railway Magazine, page 135:
Diggle Station lies high up in the Pennine Chain, subject to extreme low temperatures. With this and heavy snowfall in the winter months, Diggle bids fair to compete with the Scottish lines under similar weather conditions, and the provision of unfrozen water in the higher ambient temperature of the tunnel must be a boon to harassed engine drivers whose thirsty steeds run short of water up the gruelling 1 in 125 seven-mile climb from Stalybridge. - 1997, “Egil's Saga”, in Bernard Scudder, transl., The Sagas of Icelanders, Penguin, published 2001, page 151:
Then Egil said, ‘That happens if you eat dulse, it makes you even thirstier.’
- 1959 February, “Letters to the Editor: Diggle Water Troughs”, in Railway Magazine, page 135:
- (euphemistic) Craving alcohol; especially, experiencing some alcohol withdrawal.
After all that work on a stupidly maintained spreadsheet, I am really thirsty.
_Q: What's with John today? He seems off his game. A: He's pretty thirsty, I think. - (informal, uncommon) Causing thirst; giving one a need to drink.
Marching is thirsty work.- 1897, Bram Stoker, Dracula:
I had for dinner, or rather supper, a chicken done up some way with red pepper, which was very good but thirsty. - 2004, Charlotte Williamson, Vehicle maintenance for women, →ISBN:
Invest in a water bottle: cycling can be thirsty work.
- 1897, Bram Stoker, Dracula:
- (figurative) Craving something immaterial.
Synonym: (archaic) athirst
thirsty for knowledge
thirsty for attention
After the president left office, the nation was thirsty for change.- (slang, figurative) Craving or desiring sex.
Synonym: horny
This is the third time that girl brought up her crush. She must really be thirsty for him.- 2016 August 26, Spencer Kornhaber, “Britney Spears Finds Grace in the Hook-Up on 'Glory'”, in The Atlantic[1]:
The relentless thrill of “Do You Want to Come Over?” is not the only time Britney Spears’s new album Glory makes you feel like you’re being hit on via thirsty text message. - 2017 April 4, Carina Chocano, “It’s Easy to Be Called ‘Thirsty’ on Social Media. What About on Capitol Hill?”, in The New York Times Magazine[2]:
Nin was reviled throughout her life and afterward for writing candidly about her desires — something few women are allowed to do without being branded an open wound — and was only recently divested of her status as one of the thirstiest women of the 20th century.
- 2016 August 26, Spencer Kornhaber, “Britney Spears Finds Grace in the Hook-Up on 'Glory'”, in The Atlantic[1]:
- (slang, figurative) Craving or desiring sex.
needing to drink — see also parched
Arabic: عَطْشَان (ʕaṭšān), ظَمْآن (ẓamʔān)
Egyptian Arabic: عطشان (ʕaṭšān)
Hijazi Arabic: عطشان (ʕaṭšān)Aromanian: sitos
Asturian: sedientu
Azerbaijani: susuz
Bashkir: һыуһаған (hıwhağan)
Catalan: assedegat (ca), sedejant, sedegós (ca), (be thirsty): tenir set
Chinese:
Cantonese: 口渴 (hau2 hot3), 頸渴 / 颈渴 (geng2 hot3)
Hakka: 嘴渴 (choi-hot), 肚渴 (tú-hot)
Hokkien: 喙焦 (zh-min-nan) (chhùi-ta)
Mandarin: 渴 (zh) (kě), 口渴 (zh) (kǒukě)Esperanto: soifanta
French: (be thirsty): avoir soif (fr), assoiffé (fr)
Gallurese: sititu
Georgian: მწყურვალი (mc̣q̇urvali), მოწყურებული (moc̣q̇urebuli)
Greek: διψασμένος (el) (dipsasménos)
Ancient Greek: δίψιος (dípsios)Hmong:
White Hmong: please add this translation if you canIrish: indicated by phrases using the noun tart (ga) m "thirst"
Isan: please add this translation if you can
Khmer: ស្រេកទឹក (sreek tɨk)
Kurdish:
Central Kurdish: تینوو (tînû)
Northern Kurdish: tî (ku), têhnî (ku)Latin: sitiens, siccus, sitibundus
Latvian: izslāpis
Lithuanian: ištroškęs
Lü: please add this translation if you can
Luxembourgish: duuschtereg (lb)
Macedonian: жеден (žeden)
Marathi: तहानलेला m (tahānlelā), तहानलेले n (tahānlele), तहानलेली f (tahānlelī)
Mongolian:
Cyrillic: ангасан (angasan)Nahuatl: āmiqui
Old Church Slavonic:
Cyrillic: жѩдьнъ (žjędĭnŭ)Old Norse: þyrstr
Plautdietsch: darschtich
Polish: spragniony (pl)
Quechua: yarqa
Russian: жа́ждущий (ru) (žážduščij), томи́мый жа́ждой (tomímyj žáždoj), (verb) хоте́ть пить impf (xotétʹ pitʹ)
Sassarese: settiu
Shan: please add this translation if you can
Slovak: smädný
Spanish: sediento (es), tener sed (be thirsty), sitibundo (es) (poetic), sediente (disused)
Tagalog: uhaw
Tajik: ташна (tašna)
Tamil: please add this translation if you can
Tatar: сусаган (susağan)
Tausug: malanggang
Tibetan: ཁ་བསྐོམས (kha bskoms)
Tocharian B: yokaitse
Ukrainian: спра́глий (spráhlyj)
Unami: katusëmwi
Urdu: پیاسا (pyāsā)
Uyghur: ئۇسسىغان (ussighan), ئۇسسىماق (ussimaq), چاڭقىماق (changqimaq)
Yiddish: דאָרשטיק (dorshtik)
thirsty (countable and uncountable, plural thirsties)
- (usually in the plural) One who is thirsty (for a drink, sex, alcohol, etc.).
- 1919, The Mines Magazine, page 99:
The most interesting thing to the "chicken fanciers"—and the thirsty also—was an ice cream parlor in Morrison. Before we left […] the town ran short on all brands of beer (near, Root, etc.), and the thirsties of the crowd were reduced to the tamer pastime of eating oranges and cracking peanuts. - 2004, Sura College of Competition, Junior Knowledge Book, page 107:
A thirsty looking for a draught of water finds a welcome sea of water. - 1990, George Waters, The Pacific Horticulture Book of Western Gardening, David R Godine Pub, page 18:
Another way to limit the use of thirsty plants […] Here small beds of flowers, azaleas, and other "thirsties" could be grown satisfactorily. - 2018, Pijush Kanti Mukherjee, CoMa Chose Life:
You are like a stream of water to a thirsty in a desert. - 2019, Alessia Ferrari Dream, A medieval Saga:
Young Duchess watched the two accomplices, she seemed a thirsty who tastes clear and fresh water after having longed for it: for a moment she preserves an expression that expresses disbelief, as if she had discovered a completely new .
- 1919, The Mines Magazine, page 99:
- Thirst.
- 1948, Esther Warner, New Song in a Strange Land, page 36:
There is a thirsty that is not for the belly. There is a thirsty for land that belong to we." - 2012, Joyce Bethwane, You Are Not Your Own, page 58:
The captain would have to spend all his fortune trying to quench the Dark tenant's thirsty. A thirsty that has spanned thousands of years and never been quenched. Provide for his lusts! - 2017, Adam Roberts, The Real-Town Murders:
Afterwards Marguerite declared herself super-hungry, and also thirsty. 'Not super-thirsty, Regular thirsty. Let's say a thirsty that has worked out, learned martial arts and designed its own bat-suit. But definitely _super_-hunggry.
- 1948, Esther Warner, New Song in a Strange Land, page 36:
- thristy, t-shirty, T-shirty
- thirsti, thursty, þristi
- þrisstiȝ (Ormulum); thrustye, thursti, thyrstye (Late Middle English)
- thresti, thristi, thristie, thristy, thrustie, thrysty, þristy (especially East Anglia, Northern, North Midland)
- fursti, tristi, þhursti, þorste (Southern, West Midland)
Inherited from Old English þurstiġ (with vocalism modified after þyrstan), from Proto-West Germanic *þurstug; by surface analysis, thirst + -y.
For forms with /f/, see thirst.
- IPA(key): /ˈθirstiː/, /ˈθurstiː/, /ˈθrustiː/
- IPA(key): /ˈθristiː/, /ˈθrɛstiː/ (East Anglia, Northern, North Midland)
- IPA(key): /ˈfurstiː/ (West Midland, Southern)
thirsty
- Thirsty; having a need of or desire for hydration.
- Lacking hydration; arid, dehydrated.
- Eager, craving; greatly desiring something.
- (rare) Dehydrating, desiccating; causing thirst.
- English: thirsty
- Middle Scots: thristie, thristy
- “thirstī, adj.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007.
- “thirsty, adj.”, in OED Online
, Oxford: Oxford University Press, launched 2000.