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desiccate

verb

  1. to deprive of moisture
L331424 on Wikidata ↗

adjective

No English definition recorded for this entry.

L335965 on Wikidata ↗

Wiktionary

Pronunciation: /ˈdɛsɪkeɪt/ / /dɪˈsɪkeɪt/ / /ˈdɛsɪkət/

adj

Etymology: From Latin dēsiccātus (“dried up”), the perfect passive participle of dēsiccō: see above. Equivalent to Latin dēsiccō + -ate (adjective-forming suffix).

  1. Having had moisture removed; dehydrated, desiccated.

    It [the byssus fungus] is not only capable of propagation by the most minute fragments, however rudely detached, but it also retains the principle of revivification for years together when in a desiccate state.

    How many years have you been here? / […] / Before a desiccate sky left rivers of cracks / in the belly of your red earth?

noun

Etymology: From the substantivation of the above adjective. Equivalent to Latin dēsiccō + -ate (noun-forming suffix).

  1. A substance which has been desiccated, that is, had its moisture removed.

    The Cy dyes are shipped as a desiccate in sealed packs.

verb

Etymology: From Latin dēsiccō (“to dry completely, dry up”) + -ate (verb-forming suffix), from dē- (“completely, to exhaustion”, a prefix) + siccō (“to dry; to drain, exhaust”), from siccus (“dry”) + -ō (first conjugation verb-forming suffix). By surface analysis, de- + siccate.

  1. To remove moisture from; to dry; (sometimes) to dry to an extreme degree.

    […] As in Bodies deſsiccate, by Heat, or Age; For in them, when the Natiue Spirit goeth forth, and the Moiſture with it, the Aire with time getteth into the Pores.

    Except on the borders of the ocean, and on the mountain sides where it deposits moisture in a visible form, the sea breeze has a drying effect. It desiccates the soil with rapidity.

  2. To preserve by drying.

    The nuts are then passed into a double disc machine, and this travelling at a speed of 3,000 revolutions per minute desiccates the coconut.

    All equipment used for removing the meat from the shell and for grinding, shredding, drying, classifying, and desiccating the coconut should be clean and free from pathogens.

  3. To become dry; to dry up.

    Lately, in France, they stopped the boiling process in the preparation of brown sugar a few degrees before the point of crystallization, which is 243°, or 244°; and then spreading their syrup over their copper pans, placed round a stove or bake house, leave the syrup to desiccate slowly, and to crystallize in what they call the natural way; […]

    Favus is a chronic inflammation of the hair-follicles, associated with the production of a peculiar yellowish substance which surrounds the cylinder of the hair, and is seen through the epidermis as a minute circular spot, not raised above the level of the skin. The yellow substance, after a short period, escapes from the follicles upon the surface of the epidermis, and desiccates into yellowish friable crusts, forming a distinct cup with an inverted border, around the base of each hair.

desiccate — meaning, definition (verb, adjective) · Vinony