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inspissate

VERB
  1. become thick or thicker
    The sauce thickened
    The egg yolk will inspissate
  2. make thick or thicker
    inspissate the tar so that it becomes pitch
    Thicken the sauce
  3. make viscous or dense
    thicken the sauce by adding flour

How To Use inspissate In A Sentence

  • It is likely that the patient became pregnant with her first or nearly first ovulation otherwise one would expect that inspissated blood in the uterus and salpinges would have made fertilization difficult. Medlogs - Recent stories
  • Captain Cook was persuaded, from the knowledge which he had of this tree, and from the similarity it bore to the spruce, that, with the addition of inspissated juice of wort and molasses, it would make a very wholesome liquor, and supply the want of vegetables, of which the country was destitute. Narrative of the Voyages Round The World, Performed by Captain James Cook
  • It has all the requisite soft consonants, and is probably as common and more useful for writers than "potamophilous" or "inspissate. A Paean to Beautiful Words
  • The egg yolk will inspissate
  • Coming back to Japan and the inspissated gloom hereabouts - as found among artists, novelists, intellectuals and the press - my view is that it is always going to be there, and is a great thing for Japan.
  • The juice inspissate, drunk with wine, helps ague. Notes and Queries, Number 193, July 9, 1853 A Medium of Inter-communication for Literary Men, Artists, Antiquaries, Genealogists, etc
  • As he proceeded in his voyage, he made three puncheons of beer of the inspissated juice of malt; and the liquor produced was very brisk and drinkable. Narrative of the Voyages Round The World, Performed by Captain James Cook
  • The sturdy English soul reacting after the first cried, ‘Ah! but Methuen!’ after the second: ‘Ah! but Buller!’ then, in inspissated gloom, hardened. In Chancery
  • It is seldom larger than a pea, and contains a pultaceous mass like inspissated pus. Manual of Surgery Volume Second: Extremities—Head—Neck. Sixth Edition.
  • Heroin, morphine and opium are inspissate juices and narcotic poisons in the genus of poppies, called Papaver. Greeley Tribune - Top Stories
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