<adj.all> stood at the door drenched (or soaked) by the rain the speaker's sodden collar soppy clothes
effusively or insincerely emotional
<adj.all> a bathetic novel maudlin expressions of sympathy mushy effusiveness a schmaltzy song sentimental soap operas slushy poetry
Soppy \Sop"py\, a. Soaked or saturated with liquid or moisture; very wet or sloppy.
It [Yarmouth] looked rather spongy and soppy. --Dickens.
Berlin had the genius to be sentimental without being soppy.
Family also is important, and she returns home several times a year. "When I'm there I get so sentimental and soppy that I just want to cry." In fact, if success has a downside it is that it has kept her from starting her own family.
His last series, a soppy gameshow, was undisciplined and quickly became boring, but this one is scripted - 'I want to see the back of you'/'You won't be the first'.
Yet London, Dublin and soppy liberals everywhere dance around Sinn Fein, in a ritual of courtship that must bring a smile to the face of their president. The list of concessions wrung out of the Irish and British governments is depressing.