deliquiate
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Latin deliquia (“a flowing off, a gutter”), deliquium (“a flowing down”), from deliquare. See deliquate.
Verb
[edit]deliquiate (third-person singular simple present deliquiates, present participle deliquiating, simple past and past participle deliquiated)
- (intransitive) To melt and become liquid by absorbing water from the air; to deliquesce.
- 1790, Antoine-François de Fourcroy, Elements of natural history, and of chemistry:
- Its strong taste, its tendency to deliquiate, and indeed all its properties, lead us to think, that it would act powerfully on the animal œconomy […]
- (transitive) To cause to melt.