Adhesive moving out of ends of rolls or stacks of sheets causing ends to feel sticky and possible causing material to block Also referred to as adhesive cold flow
If you say that someone or something oozes a quality or characteristic, or oozes with it, you mean that they show it very strongly. The Elizabethan house oozes charm Manchester United were by now oozing with confidence
(1) To flow or leak out slowly, as through small openings (2) To disappear or ebb slowly (3) To exude moisture (4) Soft mud or slime (5) A layer of mud-like sediment on the floor of oceans and lakes, composed chiefly of the remains of microscopic sea animals (5) Muddy ground
The radiolarian ooze occurring in many places in very deep water is composed mainly of the siliceous skeletons of radiolarians, calcareous matter being dissolved by the lage percentage of carbon dioxide in the water at these depths
When a thick or sticky liquid oozes from something or when something oozes it, the liquid flows slowly and in small quantities. He saw there was a big hole in the back of the man's head, blood was still oozing from it The lava will just ooze gently out of the crater The wounds may heal cleanly or they may ooze a clear liquid
A soft deposit covering large areas of the ocean bottom, composed largely or mainly of the shells or other hard parts of minute organisms, as Foraminifera, Radiolaria, and diatoms
oozed
Türkische aussprache
uzd
Aussprache
/ˈo͞ozd/ /ˈuːzd/
Etymologie
(verb.) 14th century. Middle English wosen, from wose sap.