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"lubricous" Definitions
  1. (of a surface, coating, etc.) having an oily smoothness; slippery.
  2. unstable; shifty; fleeting.
  3. lubricious.

11 Sentences With "lubricous"

How to use lubricous in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "lubricous" and check conjugation/comparative form for "lubricous". Mastering all the usages of "lubricous" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Yet he appears to have been unchastened, continuing to enjoy long and lubricous lunches.
All clariti lenses are manufactured using the patented AquaGen manufacturing process, which gives a smooth, highly lubricous lens surface.
This last she did, with some lubricous staple of her own discovery, applying it with the ball of her thumb.
It contains a nugget of truth and humanity that seems to be lacking in her world of dizzy friends and lubricous acquaintances.
The company continues to work with several suppliers to test and incorporate radiopaque, lubricous and more biostable materials in this unique process.
The soul satiated with vain remembrances, cruelly is immolating what the ego enjoys, such as Zingua, the black and lubricous Queen of Angola.
Even dogs could have amulets.Rasmussen 1965:268 In one recorded instance, a young boy had 80 amulets, so many that he could hardly play.Kleivan & Sonne:43 One particular man had 17 names taken from his ancestors and intended to protect him.Kleivan & Sonne 1985:15 Tattooing among Netsilik women provided power and could affect which world they went to after their deaths.Rasmussen 1965:256,279 Nuliajuk, the Sea Woman, was described as "the lubricous one".
The caps of species in this genus are relatively large, often more than in diameter, convex in shape but in maturity flattening, or often developing a shallow umbo-a mound in the center of the cap. The surface of the cap is often uneven, and slimy or slippery (lubricous) to the touch. The cap color can range from whitish to dark reddish brown. The gills are whitish to pinkish cream in color, and have an adnexed attachment to the stem.
Merkur 1985:7Kleivan & Sonne 1985: 14 Also the Ungazighmiit (belonging to Siberian Yupiks) had a special allegoric usage of some expressions.Rubcova 1954: 128 The local cultures showed great diversity. The myths concerning the role of shaman had several variants, and also the name of their protagonists varied from culture to culture. For example, a mythological figure, usually referred to in the literature by the collective term Sea Woman, has factually many local names: Nerrivik "meat dish" among Polar Inuit, Nuliayuk "lubricous" among Netsilingmiut, Sedna "the nether one" among Baffin Land Inuit.
Among the first commercial polyurethane medical products were non-allergenic medical gloves, developed as a response to latex allergies. These advanced polymers offer a full range of physical properties, improved biocompatibility, and lubricous properties by way of custom formulations and coatings. Another material choice for polymer solution casting is silicone urethane copolymers, which are among the most biocompatible synthetic materials. This class of medical grade material was developed for long-term implantable device applications and offers the physical characteristics of high elongation, low modulus of elasticity, excellent recovery, and resistance to chemicals, oil, and UV light.
They remained there until 1904. Elisabeth de Gramont, Duchess of Clermont-Tonnerre, who chronicled various aspects of Parisian life in her four-volume memoirs, wrote about him: "The Infante was certainly the most divertingly cynical little creature who ever amused Paris. Slim, pallid, round- and restless-eyed like a bird, sullen looking, with lovely hands like those of a Coëllo Infanta, he promenaded his lubricous little royal person from drawing-room to awful bouges and then, ingratiatingly and affectionately, he would sink like an abandoned child at the feet of some 'Good Dame' and lament his lot."Elisabeth de Gramont, Years of Plenty, translated by Florence and Victor Llona, New York: Jonathan Cape and Harrison Smith, 1931, p. 114.

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