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gummed

[ US /ˈɡəmd/ ]
[ UK /ɡˈʌmd/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. covered with adhesive gum

How To Use gummed In A Sentence

  • Because it just so happens that not all canola oil is as flavourless as the stuff on supermarket shelves, which has been extruded, degummed, acidified, vacuumed, bleached and deodorized, all in the name of shelf life and what you might call the 21st-century agro-industrial palate. The Globe and Mail - Home RSS feed
  • Handy too, because it seems to get gummed up with hair and dog fur and carpet fluff occasionally.
  • Hull Road, Haxby Road, Heworth Green are gummed up by roadworks.
  • The BioCentric Energy Consortium brokers the supply and delivery of organic oils, such as, crude, degummed Soybean oil, Rapeseed oil, and Palm Oil, to Biodiesel facilities. Marketwire - Breaking News Releases
  • His pocket was all gummed up with candy.
  • I have been asked to explain the meaning of the term "gummed," which is used quite often in these traders 'journals. Journal of John Work, Dec. 15th, 1825, to June 12th, 1826
  • Yes, we really thought the Senate was going to pass the bill last week, but because of some procedural moves in the Senate that allow one or two senators to hold up the works, an amendment about energy tax credits kind of gummed up everything. CNN Transcript Jun 30, 2008
  • A large address label was gummed to the package.
  • Stamps are slammed on the title page, label pockets gummed to the rear pastedown, dust wrappers discarded, covers vulcanised in plastic - or, in those days, a toffee-brown buckram tough enough to withstand acid.
  • If an artwork does require new hinges, both Linde and Derow recommend using traditional Japanese rice paper hinges attached with wheat starch paste rather than gummed linen tapes or pre-glued papers.
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