To congeal means to thicken, clot, cake or coagulate. Mary cut herself with a knife, but within a few minutes the blood started to congeal.
Clot, coalesce, solidify, congeal, set...
Changing from a gas to a solid is called deposition.Since the opposite process... going from a solid to a gas... is sublimation, sometimes the gas-to-solid transition is called "desublimation."
It will not absorb it but will congeal with it to create a sticky mess!
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To congeal means to thicken, clot, cake or coagulate. Mary cut herself with a knife, but within a few minutes the blood started to congeal.
Yes. There is a way to safely congeal someone in jello. How?
If you don't wash the dishes right away, the food on them will congeal over the warm night.
If you meant 'congeal' - one answer could be "the spilled soup dried, making it congeal into a dark stain."
To change into curd; to coagulate; as, rennet causes milk to curdle., To thicken; to congeal., To change into curd; to cause to coagulate., To congeal or thicken.
From Latin; gelare, "to congeal".
To solidify
Clot, coalesce, solidify, congeal, set...
the man congeals the ice cream
Changing from a gas to a solid is called deposition.Since the opposite process... going from a solid to a gas... is sublimation, sometimes the gas-to-solid transition is called "desublimation."
She congealed the water into ice by putting it in the freezerCongeal- to turn something from liquid to a solid state Although technically correct, your example is not, as congeal would never be used in reference to water. The spilt blood would eventually congeal into a gelatinous blob.After the pudding still hadn't congealed after four hours, Marcus began to wonder what he had managed to do wrong this time.
It will not absorb it but will congeal with it to create a sticky mess!