wax
1 Americannoun
noun
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Also called beeswax. a solid, yellowish, nonglycerine substance allied to fats and oils, secreted by bees, plastic when warm and melting at about 145°F, variously employed in making candles, models, casts, ointments, etc., and used by bees in constructing their honeycomb.
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any of various similar substances, as spermaceti or the secretions of certain insects and plants.
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any of a group of substances composed of hydrocarbons, alcohols, fatty acids, and esters that are solid at ordinary temperatures.
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a resinous substance used by shoemakers for rubbing thread.
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a person or object suggesting wax, as in manageability or malleability.
I am helpless wax in your hands.
verb (used with object)
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to rub, smear, stiffen, polish, etc., with wax.
to wax the floor.
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to fill the crevices of (ornamental marble) with colored material.
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Informal. to make a phonograph recording of.
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Slang. to defeat decisively; drub.
We waxed the competition.
adjective
idioms
verb (used without object)
verb
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to become larger, more powerful, etc
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(of the moon) to show a gradually increasing portion of illuminated surface, between new moon and full moon Compare wane
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archaic to become as specified
the time waxed late
noun
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any of various viscous or solid materials of natural origin: characteristically lustrous, insoluble in water, and having a low softening temperature, they consist largely of esters of fatty acids
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any of various similar substances, such as paraffin wax or ozocerite, that have a mineral origin and consist largely of hydrocarbons
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short for beeswax sealing wax
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physiol another name for cerumen
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a resinous preparation used by shoemakers to rub on thread
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a mixture of wax, oil, and carbolic acid applied to the cut surface of a bone to prevent bleeding
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any substance or object that is pliable or easily moulded
he was wax in the hands of the political bosses
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(modifier) made of or resembling wax
a wax figure
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the act or an instance of removing body hair by coating it with warm wax, applying a strip of fabric, and then removing the fabric sharply, thereby plucking the hairs out by their roots
verb
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(tr) to coat, polish, etc, with wax
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to remove (body hair) by means of a wax treatment
noun
Other Word Forms
- waxable adjective
- waxer noun
- waxlike adjective
Etymology
Origin of wax1
First recorded in 1850–55; perhaps special use of wax 2
Origin of wax1
First recorded before 900; Middle English noun wax(e), wex(e), Old English weax, wex; cognate with Dutch was, German Wachs, Old Norse vax; the verb is derivative of the noun
Origin of wax1
First recorded before 900; Middle English waxen, wax(e), waxien, Old English weaxan, weacsan, weahsan; cognate with German wachsen; akin to waist
Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
Preserved in formaldehyde and paraffin wax, they come from patients treated at the UK's national bowel hospital, St Mark's, in northwest London.
From Barron's
“Fed leaders would be well served to skip opportunities to share their latest musings. The swivel-chair problem, rhetorically waxing and waning with the latest data release, is common and counterproductive,” Warsh said last April.
From MarketWatch
In recent decades—since the 1970s—the Broadway musical has waxed and waned in terms of both quality and popularity, with fertile and fallow periods.
She flicked a piece of wax from her ear with her claw.
From Literature
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The girl unzips her lunch box and pulls out something wrapped in waxed paper that lands with a thud in front of me.
From Literature
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.