Talk:occulent

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Latest comment: 1 year ago by Celui qui crée ébauches de football anglais in topic RFV discussion: October 2022–January 2023
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RFV discussion: October 2022–January 2023

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Possible typo. The term in Webster is apparently occludent ([1], [2]). Worth noting that the Latin verb occulō (to hide, cover, conceal) does exist, but has a different meaning than occlūdō (to shut up, close up). For the spelling occulent, I only found this, with unclear meaning, and several scannos for flocculent. 98.170.164.88 06:33, 14 October 2022 (UTC)Reply

Okay, maybe I dismissed this too quickly, e.g. [3] uses it as an adjective (but is this an error for opulent?), [4] as an adjective with unclear technical meaning, [5] as a noun related to agriculture. This paper explicitly uses occulent as a noun related to the verb occlude, which supports the current definition, even if etymologically "wrong" from a prescriptivist standpoint and even if the paper uses broken English (just look at the first sentence). I even wonder if the authors of the last article took the term from Wiktionary, since it was published after the entry; I guess we'll never know for sure. Anyway, further research is needed to tell whether this term really exists and what it means if so. 98.170.164.88 06:48, 14 October 2022 (UTC)Reply
Two-letter typos are rare, but the phrase flocculent precipitate seems to exist, so I'm going to guess it's most likely that occulent precipitate in the nutrition study should also read flocculent. Soap 23:43, 14 December 2022 (UTC)Reply