spongy
/ˈspʌndʒi/ (bre, ipa) · /ˈspʌndʒi/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈspən-jē/ (ame, mw)
spongy — 形容詞
- spongypositive
- spongiercomparative
- spongiestsuperlative
1. describes something that is soft when you press it and can absorb liquid easily,
海綿般的
柔軟多孔且能吸水的
describes something that is soft when you press it and can absorb liquid easily, like a sponge — for example, mossy ground after rain, a light cake, or swollen skin.
After three days of rain, the lawn behind the library felt spongy underfoot.
連續下了三天雨後,圖書館後方的草坪踩起來像海綿般軟綿綿的。
collocation: spongy + underfoot
The moss on the old stone wall was thick and spongy to the touch.
那面古老石牆上的苔蘚又厚又軟,摸起來像海綿一樣。
collocation: spongy + to the touch
The nurse gently pressed the patient's swollen ankle and found that the tissue felt spongy.
護士輕輕按壓病人腫脹的腳踝,發現組織摸起來像海綿般鬆軟。
Grandma's sponge cake was light and spongy, perfect with a cup of afternoon tea.
奶奶做的海綿蛋糕又輕又軟,配下午茶剛剛好。
The old exercise mat had grown damp and spongy after years of daily use.
那張舊運動墊經過多年每天使用,已經變得潮濕且像海綿般軟綿綿的。
- soft
General term for anything that yields to pressure; spongy adds the sense of small pores and absorbency.
- squishy
Informal; suggests wetness and easy compression without springing back, whereas spongy often bounces back.
- porous
Technical term focused on having tiny holes; spongy includes both texture and absorbency, not just structure.
文法句型
feel + spongy
spongy + noun (ground, cake, moss, soil)
用法筆記
Often used with linking verbs such as feel, look, become, or grow to describe the texture or condition of something. The noun it modifies is usually something natural (ground, moss, soil, tissue) or food (cake, bread). Avoid using it for man-made materials that are supposed to be spongy — for those, springy or cushiony is more natural.