Need another word that means the same as “damp”? Find 56 synonyms and 30 related words for “damp” in this overview.
The synonyms of “Damp” are: dampish, moist, dampness, moistness, moisture, humidity, wetness, wet, water, liquid, condensation, steam, vapour, clamminess, mugginess, dankness, wateriness, deterrent, disincentive, break, dampen, soften, weaken, dull, muffle, mute, tone down, deaden, moisten, dew, irrigate, humidify, stifle, damp down, smother, reduce, diminish, decrease, suppress, abate, moderate, silence, still, quell, lessen, lower, put a damper on, throw cold water on, calm, cool, chill, blunt, temper, discourage
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “damp” as a noun can have the following definitions:
clamminess | Unpleasant wetness. |
condensation | An unconscious process whereby two ideas or images combine into a single symbol; especially in dreams. The inside of the cab steamed up with condensation. |
dampness | A slight wetness. The dampness in the air. |
dankness | Unpleasant wetness. |
deterrent | A thing that discourages or is intended to discourage someone from doing something. Cameras are a major deterrent to crime. |
disincentive | A factor, especially a financial disadvantage, that discourages a particular action. Spiralling house prices are beginning to act as a disincentive to development. |
humidity | A quantity representing the amount of water vapour in the atmosphere or in a gas. The humidity should be supplied by regularly spraying the leaves. |
liquid | A substance that is liquid at room temperature and pressure. Drink plenty of liquids. |
moistness | A slight wetness. |
moisture | Wetness caused by water. In freshly felled wood the moisture content varies. |
mugginess | A state of warm humidity. |
steam | The expansive force of steam used as a source of power for machines. The anti corruption drive gathered steam. |
vapour | A sudden feeling of faintness or nervousness or a state of depression. Dense clouds of smoke and toxic vapour. |
water | The water of a particular sea river or lake. She ducked under the water. |
wateriness | The property of resembling the viscosity of water. The wateriness of his blood. |
wet | Wetness caused by water. I took a wet from my bottle. |
wetness | Wetness caused by water. The long dark wetness of winter. |
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “damp” as a verb can have the following definitions:
abate | Become less in amount or intensity. The storm abated. |
blunt | Make dull or blunt. Their determination had been blunted. |
break | Break down literally or metaphorically. The horse was tough to break. |
calm | Cause to be calm or quiet as by administering a sedative to. I took him inside and tried to calm him down. |
chill | (of food or drink) be cooled. The city was chilled by the violence. |
cool | Make cool or cooler. A dreamy spot full of sunshine and sea where you could cool out and detox. |
damp down | Restrain or discourage. |
dampen | Make moist. Nothing could dampen her enthusiasm. |
deaden | Convert (metallic mercury) into a grey powder consisting of minute globules, as by shaking with chalk or fatty oil. Laughter might deaden us to the moral issue. |
decrease | Decrease in size extent or range. The amount of homework decreased towards the end of the semester. |
dew | Moisten with drops of liquid. Sweat dewed her lashes. |
diminish | Cause to seem less impressive or valuable. The trial has aged and diminished him. |
discourage | Deprive of courage or hope take away hope from cause to feel discouraged. The plan is designed to discourage the use of private cars. |
dull | Become dull or lusterless in appearance lose shine or brightness. Time dulls the memory. |
humidify | Make (more) humid. The plants humidify and cool the air in hot weather. |
irrigate | Supply with a constant flow or sprinkling of some liquid, for the purpose of cooling, cleansing, or disinfecting. Irrigate the wound. |
lessen | Make or become less; diminish. The warmth of the afternoon lessened. |
lower | Make lower or quieter. Lower a rating. |
moderate | Lessen the intensity of; temper; hold in restraint; hold or keep within limits. Moderate your alcohol intake. |
moisten | Moisten with fine drops. The dew moistened the meadows. |
muffle | Suppress in order to conceal or hide. Muffle one s anger. |
mute | Muffle the sound of a musical instrument especially by the use of a mute. His professional contentment was muted by personal sadness. |
put a damper on | Formulate in a particular style or language. |
quell | Put an end to (a rebellion or other disorder), typically by the use of force. Quell my hunger. |
reduce | Reduce in scope while retaining essential elements. Reduce the influx of foreigners. |
silence | Cause to be quiet or not talk. All dissenters were silenced when the dictator assumed power. |
smother | Make (someone) feel trapped and oppressed by acting in an overly protective manner towards them. Use a fire blanket to smother a chip pan fire. |
soften | Give in, as to influence or pressure. Plant extracts to soften and moisturize the skin. |
stifle | Restrain (a reaction) or stop oneself acting on (an emotion. She stifled a giggle. |
still | Make or become still quieten. She raised her hand stilling Erica s protests. |
suppress | Put out of one’s consciousness. Suppress a nascent uprising. |
temper | Make more temperate acceptable or suitable by adding something else moderate. The display is a single sheet of glass tempered for strength. |
throw cold water on | Get rid of. |
tone down | Change to a color image. |
water | Give a drink of water to an animal. The smell of frying bacon made Hilary s mouth water. |
weaken | Reduce the level or intensity or size or scope of. The prisoner s resistance weakened after seven days. |
wet | Make one s bed or clothes wet by urinating. This eight year old boy still wets his bed. |
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “damp” as an adjective can have the following definitions:
dampish | Slightly wet. |
moist | (of the eyes) wet with tears. A moist breeze. |
absorbent | A material having capacity or tendency to absorb another substance. As absorbent as a sponge. |
arroyo | A steep-sided gully formed by the action of fast-flowing water in an arid or semi-arid region, found chiefly in the south-western US. |
bog | Wet spongy ground of decomposing vegetation; has poorer drainage than a swamp; soil is unfit for cultivation but can be cut and dried and used for fuel. A peat bog. |
canyon | A deep gorge, typically one with a river flowing through it, as found in North America. The Grand Canyon. |
cypress | A cypress tree or branches from it as a symbol of mourning. |
dampness | The state or condition of being slightly wet. The dampness in the air. |
dank | Unpleasantly cool and humid. A dank cellar. |
drenched | Abundantly covered or supplied with; often used in combination. Drenched in moonlight. |
dusty | Staid and uninteresting. A hot dusty road. |
floodplain | A low plain adjacent to a river that is formed chiefly of river sediment and is subject to flooding. |
humid | Marked by a relatively high level of water vapour in the atmosphere. A hot and humid day. |
impassable | Incapable of being passed. The narrow channels are impassable to ocean going ships. |
jungle | A style of dance music incorporating elements of ragga, hip-hop, and hard core and consisting of very fast electronic drum tracks and slower synthesized bass lines, originating in Britain in the early 1990s. The garden was a jungle of bluebells. |
mangrove | A tidal swamp which is dominated by mangroves. |
marsh | New Zealand writer of detective stories (1899-1982. Patches of marsh. |
marshland | Low-lying wet land with grassy vegetation; usually is a transition zone between land and water. Marshland landscapes. |
marshy | Soft and watery. A marshy coastline. |
mire | Soil with mud muck or mire. The country is still trying to climb out of the mire left by its previous president. |
morass | A complicated or confused situation. In midwinter the track beneath this bridge became a muddy morass. |
muddy | Cause to become muddy. Some sentences are so muddy that their meaning can only be guessed. |
quagmire | A soft boggy area of land that gives way underfoot. Torrential rain turned the building site into a quagmire. |
riparian | Relating to or situated on the banks of a river. All the riparian states must sign an agreement. |
slough | A swamp. The economic slough of the interwar years. |
soggy | Having the consistency of dough because of insufficient leavening or improper cooking. The chorus sings powerfully but the interpretation is ultimately soggy. |
splashing | The act of splashing a liquid substance on a surface. |
sponge | Wipe with a sponge so as to clean or moisten. The headguard is padded with sponge. |
swamp | Overwhelm or flood with water. The ceaseless deluge had turned the lawn into a swamp. |
swampy | Soft and watery. Swampy bayous. |
wet | Wetness caused by water. This eight year old boy still wets his bed. |
wetland | A low area where the land is saturated with water. Wetland habitats. |
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