lubricous

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lubricous
lubricous, a. (ˈl(j)uːbrɪkəs) Also 6 Sc. lubricus. [f. L. lūbric-us lubric + -ous.] 1. Slippery, smooth; slimy; oily.1659 H. More Immort. Soul ii. vi. 177 It is not such a lubricous Substance as the Animal Spirits, nor so disunited. 1695 Woodward Nat. Hist. Earth iii. i. (1723) 145 The Parts of it b... Oxford English Dictionary
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Psilocybe plutonia
convex, with an acute umbo or papilla, not viscid, glabrous, slightly translucent-striate, silky white fibrils when young that fade in age, hygrophanous, lubricous wikipedia.org
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lubricious
lubricious, a. (l(j)uːˈbrɪʃəs) [f. L. lūbric-us lubric + -ious.] = lubricous, in various senses.1583 Stubbes Anat. Abus. i. (1879) 71 margin, Womens lubricious minds neuer content with any thinge when it is well. 1656 [see lubrical]. 1698 R. Ferguson View Eccles. 93 How Lubricious a Friend and Chang... Oxford English Dictionary
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Mycena semivestipes
The cap surface, smooth and slightly lubricous, is deep viscous to dark brown in the center. wikipedia.org
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hule
▪ I. hule ME. dial. f. hill v., to cover, hide.c 1350 Will. Palerne 97 Hov hertily the herdes wif hules þat child. c 1450 Myrc 1872 Wyth þre towayles and no lasse Hule þyn auter at thy masse.▪ II. hule (ˈuːlɪ) Also ule, ulé, ulli. [Mexican Sp. (h)ule, Nahuatl ulli or olli caoutchouc.] A Central Amer... Oxford English Dictionary
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Inuit religion
Nuliajuk, the Sea Woman, was described as "the lubricous one". wikipedia.org
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multifid
multifid, a. Bot. and Zool. (ˈmʌltɪfɪd) [ad. L. multifid-us, f. multus multi- + fid-, stem of findĕre to cleave.] Having many divisions; cleft or divided into many parts. Also Comb.1752 J. Hill Hist. Anim. 23 The short and multifid-tailed monoculus. 1760 J. Lee Introd. Bot. ii. xxxi. (1765) 153 Cucu... Oxford English Dictionary
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Rhodocollybia
The surface of the cap is often uneven, and slimy or slippery (lubricous) to the touch. The cap color can range from whitish to dark reddish brown. wikipedia.org
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idiot
▪ I. idiot, n. (ˈɪdɪət) Forms: 4 ydyote, 4–5 ydiotte, 4–6 -ot(e, yd-, idyot, 5 idyote, -othe, ydeote, 6 ydeot(te, ideot(t)e, idiotte, 4–7 idiote, 4–9 ideot, 4– idiot. [a. F. idiot (13th c. in Hatz.-Darm.) = It., Sp., Pg. idiota, ad. L. idiōta uneducated, ignorant person, ad. Gr. ἰδιώτης private pers... Oxford English Dictionary
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Galerina marginata
Varying degrees of viscidity tend to be described differently and applied inconsistently by different persons applying terms such as lubricous, fatty, Smith and Singer give the following descriptions of surface texture: from "viscid" (G. autumnalis), to "shining and viscid to lubricous when moist" (G. wikipedia.org
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voluble
voluble, a. (ˈvɒljʊb(ə)l) Also 7 volubil. [a. older F. voluble (= Sp. voluble, Pg. voluvel, It. volubile) or ad. L. volūbilis, f. volū-, volvĕre to turn: see -ble. In some instances the use of the word echoes Horace Ep. i. ii. 43 (Amnis) in omne volubilis ævum.] I. 1. Liable to change; inconstant, v... Oxford English Dictionary
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Polymer solution casting
These advanced polymers offer a full range of physical properties, improved biocompatibility, and lubricous properties by way of custom formulations and wikipedia.org
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expatiative
expatiative, a. (ɛkˈspeɪʃɪətɪv) [f. expatiate v. + -ive.] Tending to spread itself out, expansive.1820 Shelley Œdipus Tyr. i, A leech..with lubricous round rings Capaciously expatiative, which make His little body like a red balloon. Oxford English Dictionary
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Conga (music)
group of drums, frying pans and shrieks, to whose sounds epileptic, ragged, semi-nude crowds run about the streets of our metropolis, and who, between lubricous wikipedia.org
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Regional forms of shamanism
usually referred to in the literature by the collective term Sea Woman, has factually many local names: Nerrivik "meat dish" among Polar Inuit, Nuliayuk "lubricous wikipedia.org
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