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Webster 1913 Edition


Ooze

Ooze

,
Noun.
[OE.
wose
, AS.
wase
dirt, mire, mud, akin to
w[GREEK]s
juice, ooze, Icel.
vās
wetness, OHG.
waso
turf, sod, G.
wasen
.]
1.
Soft mud or slime; earth so wet as to flow gently, or easily yield to pressure.
“My son i’ the ooze is bedded.”
Shak.
2.
Soft flow; spring.
Prior.
3.
The liquor of a tan vat.

Ooze

,
Verb.
I.
[
imp. & p. p.
Oozed
;
p. pr. & vb. n.
Oozing
.]
[Prov. Eng.
weeze
,
wooz
. See
Ooze
,
Noun.
]
1.
To flow gently; to percolate, as a liquid through the pores of a substance or through small openings.
The latent rill, scare
oozing
through the grass.
Thomson.
2.
Fig.: To leak (out) or escape slowly;
as, the secret
oozed
out; his courage
oozed
out.

Ooze

,
Verb.
T.
To cause to ooze.
Alex. Smith.

Webster 1828 Edition


Ooze

OOZE

,
Verb.
I.
ooz.
[The origin of this word is not easily ascertained. Heb. See Issue.]
To flow gently; to percolate, as a liquid through the pores of a substance, or through small openings. Water oozes from the earth and through a filter.
The latent rill, scaree oozing through the grass.

OOZE

,
Noun.
1.
Soft mud or slime; earth so wet as to flow gently or easily yield to pressure.
2.
Soft flow; spring.
3.
The liquor of a tan-vat.

Definition 2024


ooze

ooze

English

Noun

ooze (plural oozes)

  1. Potion of vegetable matter used for leather tanning.
  2. Secretion, humour.
  3. A thick often unpleasant liquid; muck.
  4. A pelagic marine sediment containing a significant amount of the microscopic remains of either calcareous or siliceous planktonic debris organisms.
    • 1826, Mary Shelley, The Last Man, volume 3, chapter
      Seaweed were left on the blackened marble, while the salt ooze defaced the matchless works of art.

Verb

ooze (third-person singular simple present oozes, present participle oozing, simple past and past participle oozed)

  1. (intransitive) To be secreted or slowly leak.
    • 1988, David Drake, The Sea Hag, Baen Publishing Enterprises (2003), ISBN 0671654241, unnumbered page:
      Pale slime oozed through all the surfaces; some of it dripped from the ceiling and burned Dennis as badly as the blazing sparks had done a moment before.
    • 1994, Madeleine May Kunin, Living a Political Life, Vintage Books (1995), ISBN 9780679740087, unnumbered page:
      He was hard to understand because he spoke softly, and his Vermont accent was as thick as maple syrup oozing down a pile of pancakes.
    • 2011, Karen Mahoney, The Iron Witch, Flux (2011), ISBN 9780738725826, page 278:
      Her heart constricted when she saw thick blood oozing from a wide gash in his forehead.
  2. (intransitive, figuratively) To give off a sense of (something).
    • 1989, Robert R. McCammon, The Wolf's Hour, Open Road Integrated Media (2011), ISBN 9781453231548, unnumbered page:
      "Good servants are so hard to find," Chesna said, oozing arrogance.
    • 1999, Tamsin Blanchard, Antonio Berardi: Sex and Sensibility, Watson-Guptill Publications (1999), ISBN 9780823012077, page 16:
      There are no two ways about it: a Berardi dress oozes sex appeal from its very seams.
    • 2012 April 21, Jonathan Jurejko, “Newcastle 3-0 Stoke”, in BBC Sport:
      Newcastle had failed to penetrate a typically organised Stoke backline in the opening stages but, once Cabaye and then Cisse breached their defence, Newcastle oozed confidence and controlled the game with a swagger expected of a top-four team.

Derived terms

Translations

Etymology 2

Middle English wose, from Old English wāse 'mud, mire', from Proto-Germanic *waisǭ (compare Dutch waas 'turf, sod', German Wasen, Old Norse veisa 'slime, stagnant pool'), from Proto-Indo-European *weis- 'to flow' (compare Sanskrit विष्यति (viṣyati, flow, let loose). More at virus.

Noun

ooze (plural oozes)

  1. Soft mud, slime, or shells on the bottom of a body of water.
    • Shakespeare
      My son i' the ooze is bedded.
  2. A piece of soft, wet, pliable turf.
  3. The liquor of a tanning vat.