flocculate
English
Etymology
From Latin flocculus, diminutive of floccus (“lock, tuft”).
Verb
flocculate (third-person singular simple present flocculates, present participle flocculating, simple past and past participle flocculated)
- (ambitransitive) To collect together in a loose aggregation like flocks (tufts) of wool.
- I. P. Roberts
- When applied to clay soils it [lime] binds the small particles together, or flocculates them.
- Frank Humphreys Storer Agriculture in Some of Its Relations with Chemistry 1897
- For example when the Mississippi water flows into the saline water of the Gulf of Mexico, much of the matter that was held suspended in the river-water is flocculated at once, so that it can subside. Such action as this is one prime cause of the formation of deltas, for the flocculation of fine mud by salt is common to all rivers that reach the sea.
- I. P. Roberts
Derived terms
Translations
To collect forms like flocks
Adjective
flocculate (not comparable)
Translations
Having flock form or forms
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Noun
flocculate (plural flocculates)
- A mass that has suffered flocculation.
Translations
A mass that has suffered coagulation
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Italian
Etymology 1
Verb
flocculate
- inflection of flocculare:
- second-person plural present indicative
- second-person plural imperative
Etymology 2
Participle
flocculate f pl
- feminine plural of flocculato