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inspissate: msg#00010

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Subject: inspissate

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The Word of the Day for August 11 is:

inspissate \in-SPISS-ayt\ verb
: to make thick or thicker

Example sentence:
"Letting citizens sue polluters ... would only inspissate the logjam of
litigation." (_The New York Times_, August 5, 1985)

Did you know?
"Inspissate" is ultimately derived from Latin "spissus" ("slow, dense")
and is related to Greek "spidnos" ("compact") and Lithuanian "spisti" ("to form
a swarm"). When it appeared an English in the 17th century, "inspissate"
suggested a literal thickening. Francis Bacon, for example, wrote in 1626 that
"Sugar doth inspissate the Spirits of the Wine, and maketh them not so easie to
resolue into Vapour." Eventually "inspissate" was also used metaphorically.
Clive Bell once wrote of "parties of school children and factory girls
inspissating the gloom of the museum atmosphere." There is also an adjective
"inspissate," meaning "thickened in consistency" or "made thick, heavy, or
intense," but that word is used even less frequently than the somewhat rare
verb.





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