Verb
wash up (third-person singular simple present washes up, present participle washing up, simple past and past participle washed up)
- (British, transitive, intransitive) To clean the utensils, dishes etc. used in preparing and eating a meal.
You wash up tonight and I'll dry.
I'm not washing up all these dishes.
- (US, intransitive) To wash one's hands or face, often around mealtimes.
Dinner is almost ready, so go and wash up.
- (transitive, of water) To carry (an object) to land.
The tide washes up a lot of driftwood.
The whale was washed up on the beach.
- (intransitive) To be carried by water to land.
Some dangerous chemicals washed up on the beach.
- (intransitive, by extension) To arrive in a place; to end up somewhere.
2009, Joe Ambrose, Gimme Danger: The Story of Iggy Pop:Ron Asheton also washed up in LA, jamming with one-time Stooge Jimmy Recca and Amboy Dukes drummer K. J. Knight.
- (slang, transitive, African-American Vernacular) To beat up (someone).
Translations
wash one's hands and/or face (US)
- Azerbaijani: əl-üzünü yumaq
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 洗臉/洗脸 (zh) (xǐliǎn) (to wash face), 洗手 (zh) (xǐshǒu) (to wash hands)
- Czech: umýt ruce
- Dutch: zich opfrissen, zich wassen
- Finnish: peseytyä (fi)
- French: se laver (fr), se laver les mains (to wash hands)
- German: sich waschen (de), Hände waschen (to wash hands)
- Hungarian: mosakszik (hu), megmosakszik (hu), kezet mos, bemosakszik (hu) (medical)
- Japanese: 洗面する (ja) (せんめんする, senmen suru), 手を洗う (てをあらい, te o arau)
- Macedonian: мие (mie), измива (izmiva)
- Russian: умыва́ться (ru) impf (umyvátʹsja), умы́ться (ru) pf (umýtʹsja) (to wash face and hands), мыть ру́ки impf (mytʹ rúki) (to wash hands) помы́ть ру́ки pf (pomýtʹ rúki)
- Swedish: tvätta händerna, ansiktet (sv)
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of water, to carry (an object) to land
- Hungarian: kimos (hu), partra mos, partra vet
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be carried on to land by water