ooze1

[ooz] /uz/
verb (used without object), oozed, oozing.
1.
(of moisture, liquid, etc.) to flow, percolate, or exude slowly, as through holes or small openings.
2.
to move or pass slowly or gradually, as if through a small opening or passage:
The crowd oozed toward the entrance.
3.
(of a substance) to exude moisture.
4.
(of something abstract, as information or courage) to appear or disappear slowly or imperceptibly (often followed by out or away):
His cockiness oozed away during my rebuttal speech.
5.
to display some characteristic or quality:
to ooze with piety.
verb (used with object), oozed, oozing.
6.
to make by oozing.
7.
to exude (moisture, air, etc.) slowly.
8.
to display or dispense freely and conspicuously:
He can ooze charm when it serves his interest.
noun
9.
the act of oozing.
10.
something that oozes.
11.
an infusion of oak bark, sumac, etc., used in tanning.
Origin
before 1000; Middle English wos(e) (noun), wosen (v.), Old English wōs juice, moisture
Synonyms
10. slime, mud, muck, sludge.

ooze2

[ooz] /uz/
noun
1.
Geology. a calcareous or siliceous mud composed chiefly of the shells of one-celled organisms, covering parts of the ocean bottom.
2.
soft mud, or slime.
3.
a marsh or bog.
Origin
before 900; Middle English wose, Old English wāse mud
Examples from the web for ooze
  • Those branches then become covered in hundreds of tiny white flowers that ooze with nectar, attracting insects and birds.
  • Then, to add to your troubles, you see a small blob ooze through a nearby crack.
  • At this point, all the flesh on his body had nearly liquefied into brownish-grey ooze.
  • But the swelling remained and the wound continued to ooze pus.
  • When you cut through the tender-crisp topping into the mild chilies, they ooze with melted jalapeño cheese.
  • We pruned a broken branch from our maple last weekend, and the tree started to ooze a lot of watery sap.
  • Hot rocks rain from the sky, and oceans of lava ooze across one side while sunlight never shines on the other.
  • Something which makes my sheath retract and my talons ooze.
  • Others ooze the unwholesome patina of snake-oil salesman hoping to make a fast buck.
  • They explode with boom, blast ash high into the air, and ooze molten hot lava.
British Dictionary definitions for ooze

ooze1

/uːz/
verb
1.
(intransitive) to flow or leak out slowly, as through pores or very small holes
2.
to exude or emit (moisture, gas, etc)
3.
(transitive) to overflow with: to ooze charm
4.
(intransitive) often foll by away. to disappear or escape gradually
noun
5.
a slow flowing or leaking
6.
an infusion of vegetable matter, such as sumach or oak bark, used in tanning
Word Origin
Old English wōs juice

ooze2

/uːz/
noun
1.
a soft thin mud found at the bottom of lakes and rivers
2.
a fine-grained calcareous or siliceous marine deposit consisting of the hard parts of planktonic organisms
3.
muddy ground, esp of bogs
Word Origin
Old English wāse mud; related to Old French wāse, Old Norse veisa
Word Origin and History for ooze
v.

late 14c., wosen, verbal derivative of Old English noun wos "juice, sap," from Proto-Germanic *wosan (cf. Middle Low German wose "scum"), from same source as ooze (n.). Modern spelling from late 1500s. The Old English verb was wesan. Related: Oozed; oozing.

n.

"soft mud," Old English wase "soft mud, mire," from Proto-Germanic *waison (cf. Old Saxon waso "wet ground, mire," Old Norse veisa "pond of stagnant water"), from PIE *weis- "to flow" (see virus). Modern spelling is mid-1500s.

Slang definitions & phrases for ooze

ooze

verb

To move or walk slowly; glide or slide; saunter: I'd ooze across the street and into the bar (1940s+ Black)


ooze in Technology


Object oriented extension of Z. "Object Orientation in Z", S. Stepney et al eds, Springer 1992.

Encyclopedia Article for ooze

pelagic (deep-sea) sediment of which at least 30 percent is composed of the skeletal remains of microscopic floating organisms. Oozes are basically deposits of soft mud on the ocean floor. They form on areas of the seafloor distant enough from land so that the slow but steady deposition of dead microorganisms from overlying waters is not obscured by sediments washed from the land. The oozes are subdivided first into calcareous oozes (containing skeletons made of calcium carbonate) and siliceous oozes (containing skeletons made of silica) and then are divided again according to the predominant skeleton type. Thus, the calcareous oozes include globigerina ooze, containing the shells of planktonic foraminifera, and pteropod ooze, made up chiefly of the shells of pelagic mollusks. The siliceous oozes include radiolarian ooze, comprising essentially brown clay with more than 30 percent of the skeletons of warm-water protozoa, and diatom ooze, containing the frustules (tiny shells) of diatoms. The siliceous oozes exist only where the rate of deposition of diatoms or radiolarians is greater than the rate at which their silica content is dissolved in the deep waters; thus the diatom oozes are confined to belts in the North Pacific and Antarctic, and the radiolarian oozes are found only under the eastern part of the North Pacific. Globigerina ooze is the most widespread of the oozes and occurs in both the Atlantic and Indian oceans. Pteropod ooze is found only in the mid-Atlantic.

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