Word of the Day for Thursday January 6, 2005
lubricious \loo-BRISH-us\, adjective: 1. Lustful; lewd. 2. Stimulating or appealing to sexual desire or imagination. 3. Having a slippery or smooth quality.
The heroine, through some form of ESP, can hear, and be offended by, the
lubricious speculations going on inside the heads of the men she meets.
--Philip French, "More about What Women Want," The Observer, February 4, 2001
And even if the public ate up every
lubricious detail about their leaders, that same public grew offended that the news media would actually pander to their baser impulses.
--Jeff Greenfield, "Film at 11," New York Times, November 7, 1999
. . . urged women to give up their vanities, their cosmetics, and their high-heeled shoes, and to pile them on . . . bonfires next to
lubricious works of art.
--Anthony Grafton, "The Varieties of Millennial Experience," The New Republic, November 1999
Here was a place where a kind of benign . . . anarchy seemed to rule, a
lubricious, frictionless chaos into which one could simply disappear.
--Eugene Robinson, "On the Beach at Ipanema," Washington Post, August 1, 1999
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Lubricious derives from Latin lubricus, "slippery, smooth."

If ye love wealth better than liberty, the tranquility of servitude than the animating contest of freedom, go from us in peace. We ask not your counsels or arms. Crouch down and lick the hands which feed you. May your chains sit lightly upon you,
S Adams