lixiviate
English
Etymology
Borrowed from a Medieval Latin lixivio, lixiviatus, or formed from the root of lixivium, lixivia, from lixivius (“made into lye”), from lix (“ashes, lye”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /lɪkˈsɪvieɪt/
Audio (Southern England) (file)
Verb
lixiviate (third-person singular simple present lixiviates, present participle lixiviating, simple past and past participle lixiviated)
- To separate (a substance) into soluble and insoluble components through percolation; to leach.
- 1997, Thomas Pynchon, Mason & Dixon, New York: Henry Holt and Company, →ISBN, →OCLC, pages 88–89:
- […] the Slaves are out in the Storm, doing their Owners’ Laundry, observing and reading each occurrence of Blood, Semen, Excrement, Saliva, Urine, Sweat, Road-Mud, dead Skin, and other such Data of Biography, whose pure form they practice Daily, before all is lixiviated ’neath Heaven.
Translations
To separate (a substance)
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Adjective
lixiviate (comparative more lixiviate, superlative most lixiviate)
- Of or relating to lye or lixivium; of the quality of alkaline salts.
- Impregnated with salts from wood ashes.
- 1685, Robert Boyle, Short Memoirs for the Natural Experimental History of Mineral Waters:
- but we cou'd not, by this way, discern the least acidity in our arsenical solution, but rather a manifest sign of an urinous or lixiviate quality
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