It's the word of the day for October 29th.
Today's word is DELEQUES, spelled D-E-L-I-Q-U-E-S-C-E.
DELEQUES is a verb.
It can mean to dissolve or melt away,
or in reference to some fungal structures such as mush from gills,
It can mean to become soft or liquid with age or maturity.
Here's the word used in a sentence from Apollo by Robert McFarlane.
He would mold his figures in full in wax, then take a hot knife and,
like a metaphysical surgeon, cut away triangles, rhomboids,
flaps, and scraps until only a latticework was left.
These new shape-shifting figures comprised more gaps than joints,
bodies in the delicate arduous process of shedding their skins,
scattering into metal petals, being eroded and deli-quest.
Things were freshly able to pass through these painstakingly hard-to-cast bronzes, light-air sight.
The word deli-quest comes from the prefix D-D-E,
meaning from down or away, and a form of the Latin verb liqueuré, meaning to be fluid.
Things that deliquesse, it could be said, turn to mush in more ways than one.
In scientific contexts,
a substance that deliquesse absorbs moisture from the atmosphere until it dissolves in the absorbed water and forms a solution.
When plants and fungi deliquesse, they lose rigidity as they age.