I think the most essential thing to learn here is not the difference between the verb "soak" and the phrasal verb "soak up" containing a particle (preposition or adverb in phrasal verb mode). Instead it is the particle "up" after an action, usually a movement, verb. Get up, Go up/down, move up, drink up/down, and throw up come to mind. I have not found any discussion about up/down as particles in phrasal verbs in my most essential sources on English usage from Oxford as Fowler (Modern English Usage) and Gardner (American English Usage). That is regretful. Yet I have always taught that they rather imprecisely though deliberately imply the added general meaning of "completely," "wholly," or "totally" in addition to the verb they are used after. Still this seems true only about 80% of the time. But that much works superbly for students in rule-oriented grammar, EFL/ESL/L2 purposes. Thus soak down would imply completely taking up or in a liquid, idea, concept, belief, etc.