Synonyms for dehydrated
Grammar : Verb |
Spell : dee-hahy-dreyt |
Phonetic Transcription : diˈhaɪ dreɪt |
Définition of dehydrated
Origin :- 1854, from de- + hydrate (v.). A chemical term at first, given a broader extension 1880s. Related: Dehydration (1834).
- verb take moisture out of
- Their shrunken, dehydrated world of doll-houses and miniatures.
- Extract from : « This Crowded Earth » by Robert Bloch
- He attributes the scurvy to a dependence on dehydrated vegetables in the ration.
- Extract from : « Scurvy Past and Present » by Alfred Fabian Hess
- This was caused by a diet of pasteurized milk and dehydrated vegetables.
- Extract from : « Scurvy Past and Present » by Alfred Fabian Hess
- He muttered, "This country is so dry even the morning dew is dehydrated."
- Extract from : « Border, Breed Nor Birth » by Dallas McCord Reynolds
- Without it, he'd be dehydrated before he could get a safe distance away.
- Extract from : « The Sky Is Falling » by Lester del Rey
- Though it had been dehydrated, his brain had been kept perfectly intact through the ages, and now it was restored.
- Extract from : « The Eternal Wall » by Raymond Zinke Gallun
- The dehydrated products designated are in every particular equal to fresh products and far superior to canned goods.
- Extract from : « Packing and Portaging » by Dillon Wallace
- Dehydrated vegetables possess all the qualities, in fact, of fresh vegetables, with only the large percentage of water removed.
- Extract from : « Packing and Portaging » by Dillon Wallace
- Dehydrated goods are equal to fresh goods and are far superior to the canned kind.
- Extract from : « Touring Afoot » by Claude Powell Fordyce
- Now here is one who was both squeezed and stretched alternately as well as hammered, dehydrated and almost asphyxiated, is it not?
- Extract from : « Far from Home » by J.A. Taylor
Antonyms for dehydrated
Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019