Advertisement
Advertisement
quicksand
[kwik-sand]
noun
a bed of soft or loose sand saturated with water and having considerable depth, yielding under weight and therefore tending to suck down any object resting on its surface.
quicksand
/ ˈɪˌæԻ /
noun
a deep mass of loose wet sand that submerges anything on top of it
quicksand
A deep bed of loose, smoothly rounded sand grains, saturated with water and forming a soft, shifting mass that yields easily to pressure and tends to engulf objects resting on its surface. Although it is possible for a person to drown while mired in quicksand, the human body is less dense than any quicksand and is thus not drawn or sucked beneath the surface as is sometimes popularly believed.
Other 51Թ Forms
- quicksandy adjective
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of quicksand1
Example Sentences
For the next eight years, as if submerging into quicksand, I sank deeper into debt.
So I know all too well that the hype is built on quicksand — specifically, a seven-decade history of failure.
Newcastle could, and should, have added more as they simply over-powered a Liverpool team who looked like they were running in quicksand, this loss compounding the midweek Champions League exit against PSG on penalties.
“Being swallowed by snow as if sinking in quicksand is not intrinsic in snowboarding,” the lawsuit said.
Disney’s retrenchment comes nearly three years after it found itself sinking in political quicksand.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse