View example sentences, synonyms and word forms for Resinous.

Resinous

Resinous meaning

Of or relating to resin. | Negative (of electric charge).

Synonyms of Resinous

Example sentences (14)

The aroma offers a bready malt and citrusy, floral, resinous and tropical notes; I'm specifically getting some passionfruit, pomelo, orange, pine, nectarine, pineapple and alcohol.

It has the most resinous flavour and goes well with potatoes, especially sautéed with garlic as well.

Green apple fruitiness makes for an odd pairing with anise and caraway-like spice notes, but most of the flavors are swallowed up by neutral, pervasive booziness, and a finish that reminds one of the resinous quality in freshly cut pine.

There is a moderate dryness from that bitterness with a very smooth, balanced, sticky, resinous and fairly grainy and bready mouthfeel, with zero warming alcohol for 6.5 percent.

Both the translucent inner pulp and the resinous yellow aloin from wounding the aloe plant are used externally for skin discomforts.

Commercial pines are grown in plantations for timber that is denser, more resinous, and therefore more durable than spruce (Picea).

Cultivation begins when a farmer gets a stick (broodlac) that contains eggs ready to hatch and ties it to the tree to be infested. citation Thousands of lac insects colonize the branches of the host trees and secrete the resinous pigment.

Franklin proposed that "vitreous" and "resinous" electricity were not different types of " electrical fluid " (as electricity was called then), but the same electrical fluid under different pressures.

It melts at about 62 °C to a fatty, yellow resinous liquid; and at convert it is volatilised into a white vapour.

It was used for both the lac insect (because of their enormous number) and the scarlet resinous secretion it produces.

The expression "bitumen" originated in the Sanskrit, where we find the words jatu, meaning "pitch," and jatu-krit, meaning "pitch creating", "pitch producing" (referring to coniferous or resinous trees).

The pungent taste and scent come from cinnamaldehyde (about 90% of the essential oil from the bark) and, by reaction with oxygen as it ages, it darkens in colour and forms resinous compounds.

The stems of the plant bear resinous, dark green leaves with two opposite lanceolate leaflets joined at the base, with a deciduous awn between them, each leaflet convert long and convert broad.

Twenty backed edge bladelets were found with the remains of a resinous substance and the imprint of a circular handle (a horn).