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Etymology

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Borrowed from French lacque (a sort of sealing wax), from Portuguese laca, lacca (gum lac), from Persian لاک (lâk), from Hindi लाख (lākh), from Sanskrit लाक्षा (lākṣā).

Pronunciation

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Noun

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lacquer (countable and uncountable, plural lacquers)

  1. A glossy, resinous material used as a surface coating; either a natural exudation of certain trees, or a solution of nitrocellulose in alcohol, etc.
    Synonym: varnish
    • 1840, Frances Trollope, “Practical Information Carefully Obtained, and Promptly Acted upon— []”, in The Widow Married; [], volume III, London: Henry Colburn, [], →OCLC, page 2:
      Had he deemed it "wisest, best," Mr. O'Donagough was not without the means of furnishing a splendid mansion in very showy style, and yet not leaving a single morsel of lacker, or or-molu, unpaid for.
    • 1954, Arthur K. Doolittle, The technology of solvents and plasticizers:
      It is a solvent for nitrocellulose and vinyl chloride-acetate resins and may function as an antiblush agent in lacquers.
    • 1960, Francis E. Condon, Herbert Meislich, Introduction to Organic Chemistry[1], page 274:
      Cellosolves are used as solvents for lacquers, for sealing cellophane wrapping, and in hydraulic-brake fluid.
    • 1992, Tadashi Inumaru, Mitsukuni Yoshida, The Traditional Crafts of Japan: Wood and bamboo:
      In place of traditional methods in which materials such as gesso, yellow ocher, powdered earth, liquid glue, and Japan tallow were used to obtain a gloss, and transparent lacquer was rubbed into the wood to protect it, materials such as artificially produced varoids and lacquer came into widespread use.

Derived terms

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Translations

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Verb

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lacquer (third-person singular simple present lacquers, present participle lacquering, simple past and past participle lacquered)

  1. To apply a lacquer to something or to give something a smooth, glossy finish.

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Further reading

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Anagrams

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