pass water

  • 1pass water — verb eliminate urine (Freq. 1) Again, the cat had made on the expensive rug • Syn: ↑make, ↑urinate, ↑piddle, ↑puddle, ↑micturate, ↑piss, ↑pee, ↑ …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 2pass water —    to urinate    The phrase is so common that we do not confuse it with driving by a river or handing someone a jug at table:     The nurse took him into a little cubicle and asked him to pass water into a bottle. (Bradbury, 1959)    And see… …

    How not to say what you mean: A dictionary of euphemisms

  • 3pass water — urinate. → pass …

    English new terms dictionary

  • 4pass water — urinate, take a leak [B], take a pee [B]    The nurse came in and asked him if he d passed water yet …

    English idioms

  • 5pass water — verb to urinate …

    Wiktionary

  • 6pass water — urinate …

    English contemporary dictionary

  • 7pass water — formal to make liquid waste leave your bladder …

    English dictionary

  • 8water — [wôt′ər, wät′ər] n. [ME < OE wæter, akin to Ger wasser < IE * wodōr < * wed , to wet (< base * awed , to moisten, flow) > Gr hydōr, water, L unda, a wave, Russ voda, water, Ir uisce, water] 1. the colorless, transparent liquid… …

    English World dictionary

  • 9pass — 1 verb 1 GO PAST (I, T) to come up to a particular point or object and go past it: The crowd parted to let the truck pass. | They kept quiet until the soldiers had passed. | pass sb/sth: We passed each other on the staircase. | I pass the sports… …

    Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • 10pass — [[t]pɑ͟ːs, pæ̱s[/t]] ♦ passes, passing, passed 1) VERB To pass someone or something means to go past them without stopping. [V n] As she passed the library door, the telephone began to ring... Jane stood aside to let her pass... [V ing] I sat in… …

    English dictionary