Free from or lacking embellishment or sweetness
Free from or lacking alcohol or alcoholic beverages.
Involving computations rather than work with biological or chemical matter.
Without a usual complement or consummation; impotent.
Of a bite from an animal: not containing the usual venom.
Of a mass, service, or rite: involving neither consecration nor communion.
Describing an area where sales of alcoholic or strong alcoholic beverages are banned.
Athirst, eager.
Low in sugar; lacking sugar; unsweetened.
Free from applied audio effects (especially reverb).
Not using afterburners or water injection for increased thrust.
Exhibiting precise execution lacking delicate contours or soft transitions of color.
Lacking interest, boring.
Amusing without showing amusement.
Built without or lacking mortar.
Free from or lacking moisture.
Unable to produce a liquid, as water, (petrochemistry) oil, or (farming) milk.
Anhydrous: free from or lacking water in any state, regardless of the presence of other liquids.
The process by which something is dried.
The dry season.
A prohibitionist (of alcoholic beverages).
Unsweetened ginger ale; dry ginger.
A radical or hard-line Conservative; especially, one who supported the policies of British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in the 1980s.
An area of waterless country.
An area with little or no rain, or sheltered from it.
To remove moisture from.
To lose moisture.
To exhaust; to cause to run dry.
For an actor to forget his or her lines while performing.
The food had an irony taste to it.
Of or pertaining to the metal iron.
Contradiction between circumstances and expectations; condition contrary to what might be expected.
Dramatic irony: a theatrical effect in which the meaning of a situation, or some incongruity in the plot, is understood by the audience, but not by the characters in the play.
Socratic irony: ignorance feigned for the purpose of confounding or provoking an antagonist.
The quality of a statement that, when taken in context, may actually mean something different from, or the opposite of, what is written literally; the use of words expressing something other than their literal intention, often in a humorous context.
An ironic statement.