noun.
Any absorbent material employed to take up the blood and other fluids in surgical operations.
To cleanse or wipe with a sponge: as, to sponge the body; to sponge a slate or a cannon.
To wipe out with a sponge, as letters or writing; efface; remove with a sponge; destroy all traces of: with out, off, etc.
Specifically To dampen, as in cloth-manufacturing.
To absorb; use a sponge, or act like a sponge, in absorbing: generally with up: as, to sponge up water that has been spilled.
To gain by sycophantic or mean arts.
To drain; harass by extortion; squeeze; plunder.
In baking, to set a sponge for: as, to sponge bread.
To gather sponges where they grow; dive or dredge for sponges.
To live meanly at the expense of others; obtain money or other aid in a mean way: with on.
noun.
A fixed aquatic organism of a low order, various in form and texture, composed of an aggregate of amœbiform bodies disposed about a common cavity provided with one or more inhalent and exhalent orifices (ostioles and oscules), through which water pours in and out.
noun.
The fibrous framework of a colony of sponge-animalcules, from which the animalcules themselves have been washed out, and from which the gritty or sandy parts of the colony, if there were any, have been taken away. See skeleton, 1 .
noun.
Any sponge-like substance.
noun.
A tool for cleaning a cannon after its discharge.
noun.
Figuratively, one who or that which absorbs without discrimination, and as readily gives up, when subjected to pressure, that which has been absorbed.
noun.
One who persistently lives upon others; a sycophantic or cringing dependent; a hanger-on for the sake of maintenance; a parasite.
noun.
In the manège, the extremity or point of a horseshoe answering to the heel.
noun.
The coral, or mass of eggs, under the abdomen of a crab.