Definitions

from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.

  • noun A shrubby spurge (Euphorbia antisyphilitica) chiefly of western Texas and Mexico, having densely clustered, erect, essentially leafless stems that yield a multipurpose wax.

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

  • noun wax-coated Mexican shrub related to Euphorbia antisyphilitica
  • noun wax-coated shrub of northern Mexico and southwestern United States

Etymologies

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

[American Spanish, diminutive of Spanish candela, candle, from Latin candēla; see candle.]

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Examples

  • For vegans, candelilla wax is the preferred alternative since it is derived from a plant.

    Lipstick making - ingredients & melting Anne-Marie 2008

  • Look for mascaras with hard-working ingredients like my Long Black Mascara which boasts candelilla wax, beeswax and allantoin to keep lashes in top-notch form.

    Napoleon Perdis: New Year, New You: 5 Easy Beauty Resolutions for 2011 Napoleon Perdis 2010

  • Wax - Waxes can be beeswax, candelilla wax, jasmine wax, orange wax and ozokerite wax.

    Lipstick making - ingredients & melting Anne-Marie 2008

  • Look for mascaras with hard-working ingredients like my Long Black Mascara which boasts candelilla wax, beeswax and allantoin to keep lashes in top-notch form.

    Napoleon Perdis: New Year, New You: 5 Easy Beauty Resolutions for 2011 Napoleon Perdis 2010

  • Another distinctive plant is candelilla, or wax plant.

    Chihuahuan Semidesert Province (Bailey) 2009

  • In areas with shallow soils of good drainage, a scrub dominated by candelilla (Euphorbia antisyphilitica), Agave lechuguilla, Acacia glandulifera and Mimosa zygophylla develops.

    Chihuahuan desert 2008

  • The stone walls of Ocotillo, a Southwestern fine-dining restaurant, are the originals built by Rex Ivey, an early settler of Lajitas and a farmer and trader in candelilla wax, a product of the local, spiky-leafed plant that dots the surrounding desert.

    Texas Hideout 2006

  • Once jojoba wax is available in commercial quantities on a regular basis, it may be able to seize a sizable part of the wax market, but only if it can be produced at prices comparable to those of waxes such as beeswax, carnauba, and candelilla.

    6 Markets 1985

  • Part I I l: A survey of candelilla and candelilla wax.

    Chapter 5 1953

  • HODGE, W.H. and SINEATH, H.H. (1956) The Mexican candelilla plant and its wax.

    Chapter 5 1953

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