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The phrase "utterly soaked" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe someone or something that is completely wet, often due to rain or water exposure. Example: "After being caught in the downpour without an umbrella, I was utterly soaked by the time I reached home."
Exact(3)
For Cinder is utterly soaked in the flavour of Mississippi, lending it a compellingly evocative atmosphere.
Then as the rain sloshed down he walked around with his hands in the pockets of a rather elegant suit that by now was utterly soaked.
While you're here, you must visit the Criterion Restaurant, regarded as one of London's premier fine dining establishments, it's utterly soaked with history.
Similar(57)
It's perfect, utterly entrancing and bewitching from the first rain soaked kick to the the last drop, a record to live with and live inside, one of the most genuinely gorgeous tracks of the millennium.
Get soaked.
I soaked.
Warm Spiced Doughnuts ($9) were cakey rather than fluffy, best when soaked in the pistachio ice cream, brandied cherries, and apricot orange blossom coulis that all dissolved into a single sweet, frangrant, utterly delicious soup.
You can't talk about how you spent twenty years soaking in Nabokov and Coetzee, but in the end arrived at something uniquely yours, yet utterly unimaginable without having absorbed these writers for decades.
Soak overnight.
Soak it in.
Soak the rich!
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com