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Deliquesce Verb Contexts Beef October Del Ih Kwess Derives Prefix

Deliquesce means to dissolve or melt away, or to become soft or liquid with age, as seen in some fungi or figuratively with exhaustion.

Deliquesce means to dissolve or melt away, or to become soft or liquid with age, as seen in some fungi or figuratively with exhaustion.

Word deliquesce
Date October 2, 2016
Type verb
Syllables del-ih-KWESS
Etymology Deliquesce derives from the prefix de- ("from, down, away") and a form of the Latin verb liquēre, meaning "to be fluid." Things that deliquesce, it could be said, turn to mush in more ways than one. In scientific contexts, a substance that deliquesces absorbs moisture from the atmosphere until it dissolves in the absorbed water and forms a solution. When plants and fungi deliquesce, they lose rigidity as they age. When deliquesce is used in non-scientific contexts, it is often in a figurative or humorous way to suggest the act of "melting away" under exhaustion, heat, or idleness, as in "teenagers deliquescing in 90-degree temperatures."
Examples "'Number Nine,' a 16-minute bonbon of a ballet …, keeps its yellow-clad ensemble and four principal couples wheeling through kaleidoscopic patterns that surprise as they smoothly crystallize and deliquesce, sometimes matching the musical rhythms, sometimes working against them." — Roslyn Sulcas, The New York Times, 26 Sept. 2012

"But wait. If you have the brisket, will there be room for the beef rib? There'd better be, because it is a triumph. The salt-and-pepper-coated smoked meat and fat deliquesce into a sort of beef confit." — Mark Vamos, The Dallas Morning News, 25 Dec. 2015
Definition 1 : to dissolve or melt away
2 : to become soft or liquid with age or maturity—used of some fungal structures (as the gills of a mushroom)

Tags: wordoftheday::verb

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