sweat
verb/swet/
/swet/
Verb Forms
Idioms Phrasal Verbs| present simple I / you / we / they sweat | /swet/ /swet/ |
| he / she / it sweats | /swets/ /swets/ |
| past simple sweated | /ˈswetɪd/ /ˈswetɪd/ |
| past participle sweated | /ˈswetɪd/ /ˈswetɪd/ |
| -ing form sweating | /ˈswetɪŋ/ /ˈswetɪŋ/ |
- [intransitive, transitive] when you sweat, drops of liquid appear on the surface of your skin, for example when you are hot, ill or afraid synonym perspire
- to sweat heavily
- The palms of his hands began to sweat.
- sweat something He was sweating buckets (= a lot).
Extra ExamplesTopics Health and Fitnessb2- After two hours of digging he was sweating like a pig.
- He awoke with a pounding heart, sweating with fear.
- The heat was making us sweat.
- We were sweating profusely from the exertion of moving the furniture.
- You can sweat out toxins in the sauna.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb- freely
- heavily
- a lot
- …
- begin to
- start to
- make somebody
- …
- from
- with
- sweat buckets
- sweat bullets
- sweat like a pig
- …
Definitions on the go
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- [intransitive] if something sweats, the liquid that is contained in it appears on its surface
- The cheese was beginning to sweat.
- The walls will continue to sweat until the plaster is completely dry.
- [intransitive] sweat (over something) to work hard at something
- Are you still sweating over that report?
- [intransitive] (informal) to worry or feel nervous about something
- They really made me sweat during the interview.
- Even though she’d made her decision, she let them sweat for another week.
- Oh, let them sweat a bit.
- [transitive, intransitive] sweat (something) (British English) if you sweat meat or vegetables or let them sweat, you heat them slowly with a little fat in a pan that is covered with a lid
produce liquid on skin/surface
work hard
worry
heat food
Word OriginOld English swāt (noun), swǣtan (verb), of Germanic origin; related to Dutch zweet and German Schweiss, from an Indo-European root shared by Latin sudor.
Idioms
See sweat in the Oxford Advanced American DictionarySee sweat in the Oxford Learner's Dictionary of Academic Englishdon’t sweat it
- (North American English, informal) used to tell somebody to stop worrying about something
- ‘I’m sure he’ll find out.’ ‘Don’t sweat it—no one’s going to tell him.’
- Don't sweat it — We'll be fine.
don’t sweat the small stuff
- (North American English, informal) used to tell somebody not to worry about small details or things that are not important
slog/sweat/work your guts out
- (informal) to work very hard to achieve something
- I slogged my guts out for the exam.
sweat blood
- (informal) to work very hard
- I sweated blood to get everything ready in time.
sweat/slog/work your guts out
- (informal) to work very hard to achieve something
- I sweated my guts out for the exam.
Check pronunciation:
sweat