Definitions

from The Century Dictionary.

  • Pertaining to or produced from borax. Also boric.

from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.

  • adjective Pertaining to, or produced from, borax; containing boron; boric.

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • adjective inorganic chemistry Of or relating to boron alias borax.
  • adjective Cockney rhyming slang penniless

from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.

  • adjective of or relating to or derived from or containing boron

Etymologies

from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition

[From Medieval Latin bōrāx, bōrāc-, borax; see borax.]

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

From Medieval Latin borax (genitive boracis), itself via Arabic بورق (báuraq), from Persian بوره (būra).

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

Shortened from boracic lint ("skint").

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Examples

  • There is a white crystalline substance found native in volcanic districts called boracic acid.

    Elements of Chemical Philosophy: Part 1, Vol.1 Humphry Davy, Sir Humphry Davy 1812

  • The others such as boracic acid, borax and soda are often used for sweetening the brine and to keep it from spoiling but are not absolutely essential.

    Every Step in Canning Grace Viall Gray

  • The first thing we did was to lance the big blisters that had formed and let out the fluid they contained; afterwards we put on boracic compresses, night and morning.

    The South Pole~ The End of the Winter 2009

  • They would not doubtless have the advantages of the wicks which are impregnated with boracic acid, and which vitrify as they burn and are entirely consumed, but Cyrus Harding having manufactured a beautiful pair of snuffers, these candles would be greatly appreciated during the long evenings in Granite House.

    The Mysterious Island 2005

  • They would not doubtless have the advantages of the wicks which are impregnated with boracic acid, and which vitrify as they burn and are entirely consumed, but Cyrus Harding having manufactured a beautiful pair of snuffers, these candles would be greatly appreciated during the long evenings in Granite House.

    The Mysterious Island 2005

  • The first thing we did was to lance the big blisters that had formed and let out the fluid they contained; afterwards we put on boracic compresses, night and morning.

    The South Pole; an account of the Norwegian antarctic expedition in the 'Fram', 1910 to 1912 2003

  • He could put up with the loss of supplies of things like iodine and calamine lotion, since there were alternatives that worked just as well, but there had been no supply of boracic acid ever since the outbreak of the war, since that particular substance had always come from the volcanic steam of Tuscany; it was the best drug he knew of for coping with infections of the bladder and foulness of the urine.

    Captain Corelli's Mandolin De Bernieres, Louis 2003

  • Her mother was boracic due to her father's complete refusal to get a job so she was unable to help out any more, and Susan didn't like to keep asking Kate as it just made relations between her and her son more strained.

    two women Cole, Martina 1999

  • She was on the ponce. pi'If it's money you're after I am boracic lint, Mother.

    two women Cole, Martina 1999

  • The same impurities found in the stream are also found in the lake, where the water is so saturated with salt, boracic acid, etc., that one can no more sink in it than in the water of the Great Salt lake; and I found it so saturated that after swimming in it a little while the skin all over my body was gnawed and made very sore by the acids.

    Scientific American Supplement, No. 829, November 21, 1891 Various

Comments

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  • (noun) - Don't give me the old boracic, don't tell me tall yarns.

    --Paul Tempest's Lag's Lexicon: A Dictionary of the English Prison, 1950

    January 14, 2018