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were soap
noun
A substance able to mix with both oil and water, used for cleaning, often in the form of a solid bar or in liquid form, derived from fats or made
Exact(8)
At Venice, their films were soap operas about hysterical people shouting at each other in bars.
Instead, it makes its programmes as though they were soap flakes.
When the British wanted some publicity shots of him with his wife in 1941, he muttered that Churchill wanted to sell him as if he were soap.
Because of some of the heaviest rainfall in decades, water began melting the aging chalk pillars and ceilings as if they were soap in a bathtub.
They appear on magazine covers on a weekly basis by flogging their lives as if they were soap operas, providing intimate updates about their romantic travails, their quarrels with their ex-partners.
Also in the brew were soap molecules, oleic acid, and oleyl amine.
Similar(51)
"That's soap, too".
So was soap.
It was soap.
Civilisation may be soap.
Civilisation, they say, is soap.
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