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What is the meaning of splash?

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What is the meaning of splash?

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  1. 1...If you splash about or splash around in water, you hit or disturb the water in a noisy way, causing some of it to fly up into the air.

    2...If you splash a liquid somewhere  or if it splashes, it hits someone or something and scatters in a lot of small drops.

    3...A splash is the sound made when something hits water or falls into it.

    4...A  splash of a liquid is a small quantity of it that has been spilt on something or added to something.

    5... If a magazine or a newspaper splashes a story, it prints it in such a way that it is very noticeable.

    6....If you make a splash, you become noticed or become popular because of something that you have done.

    *


  2. http://answersinfo.zor.org

    you can get much information in this website, If you will check anyone blue link in website.


  3. Meaning of splash:

    1. to wet or soil by dashing masses or particles of water, mud, or the like; spatter: Don't splash her dress!  

    2. to fall upon (something) in scattered masses or particles, as a liquid does.  

    3. to cause to appear spattered.  

    4. to dash (water, mud, etc.) about in scattered masses or particles.  

    5. to make (one's way) with splashing: He splashed his way across the pool.  

    6. Logging. to move (logs) by releasing a body of water from a splash dam.  


  4. v.tr.

    To propel or scatter (a fluid) about in flying masses.

    To scatter fluid onto in flying masses; wet, stain, or soil with flying fluid.

    To cause (something) to scatter fluid in flying masses: splashed their hands in the water.

    To make (one's way) with or by scattering of fluid.

    To apply patches or spots of a contrasting, usually bright, color to: a floral pattern that was splashed with pink; moonlight splashing the deserted courtyard.

    To display or publicize very noticeably: Their engagement was splashed all over the tabloids.

    v.intr.

    To cause a fluid to scatter in flying masses: splashed about in the swimming pool.

    To fall into or move through fluid with this effect: We splashed through the waves.

    To move, spill, or fly about in scattered masses: Whipped cream splashed onto the counter.

    To produce a sound or sight associated with this effect.

    n.

    The act or sound of splashing: went for a splash in the lake; heard the splash of the fish being thrown back.

    A flying mass of fluid.

    A small amount, especially of a fluid: a splash of liqueur on the cake.

    A marking produced by or as if by scattered fluid: a splash of light.

    A great though often short-lived impression; a stir: a publicity splash.

    phrasal verb:

    splash down

    To land in water. Used of a spacecraft or missile.

    [Probably alteration of PLASH.]

    Veterinary Dictionary: splashing

    An abattoir term for large areas of hemorrhage in the form of brush marks or groups of spots, usually evident in muscles and under serous membranes.

    Marine Corps Dictionary: Splash

    To drive an Amtrac off the back of an amphibious ship.

    To make a liquid scatter and fall in drops.

    If all the skies were sunshine Our faces would be fain To feel once more upon them The cooling splash of rain. — Henry van d**e (1852-1933)

    In fluid mechanics, a splash is a sudden disturbance to the otherwise quiescent free surface of a liquid (usually water). The disturbance is typically caused by a solid object suddenly hitting the surface, although splashes can occur in which moving liquid supplies the energy. This use of the word is onomatopoeic.

    Splashes are characterized by transient ballistic flow, and are governed by the Reynolds number and the Weber number.

    Small scale splashes in which a droplet of liquid hits a free surface can produce symmetric forms that resemble a coronet; milk is often used as it is opaque.

    Sand is said to splash if hit sufficiently hard (see dry quicksand) and sometimes the impact of a meteorite is referred to as splashing, if small bits of ejecta are formed.

    Physicist Lei Xu and coworkers at the University of Chicago discovered that the splash due to the impact of a small drop of ethanol onto a dry solid surface could be suppressed by reducing the pressure below a specific threshold. For drops of diameter 3.4 mm falling through air, this pressure was about 20 kilopascals, or 0.2 atmosphere.

    http://www.answers.com/splash

  5. take a bucket of water and throw it at the closest guy you meet.

    the water. not the bucket.

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