exfoliate
[ eks-foh-lee-eyt ]
/ ɛksˈfoʊ liˌeɪt /
verb (used with object), ex·fo·li·at·ed, ex·fo·li·at·ing.
to throw off in scales, splinters, etc.
to remove the surface of (a bone, the skin, etc.) in scales or laminae.
verb (used without object), ex·fo·li·at·ed, ex·fo·li·at·ing.
to throw off scales or flakes; peel off in thin fragments: The bark of some trees exfoliates.
Geology.
- to split or swell into a scaly aggregate, as certain minerals when heated.
- to separate into rudely concentric layers or sheets, as certain rocks during weathering.
Medicine/Medical.
to separate and come off in scales, as scaling skin or any structure separating in flakes.
Origin of exfoliate
OTHER WORDS FROM exfoliate
ex·fo·li·a·tive [eks-foh-lee-ey-tiv, -uh-tiv] /ɛksˈfoʊ liˌeɪ tɪv, -ə tɪv/, adjectiveWords nearby exfoliate
Example sentences from the Web for exfoliate
“I enjoy dating beardy blokes because you get to kiss and exfoliate at the same time,” she quips to The Daily Beast.
The loch having been drained away, we proceeded to exfoliate the crannog.
Trees. A Woodland Notebook |Herbert Maxwell
British Dictionary definitions for exfoliate
exfoliate
/ (ɛksˈfəʊlɪˌeɪt) /
verb
(tr)
to wash (a part of the body) with a granular cosmetic preparation in order to remove dead cells from the skin's surface
(of bark, skin, etc) to peel off in (layers, flakes, or scales)
(intr)
(of rocks or minerals) to shed the thin outermost layer because of weathering or heating
(of some minerals, esp mica) to split or cause to split into thin flakes
a factory to exfoliate vermiculite
Derived forms of exfoliate
exfoliation, noun exfoliative, adjectiveWord Origin for exfoliate
C17: from Late Latin
exfoliāre to strip off leaves, from Latin
folium leaf