efflower

English

Etymology

Borrowed from French effleurer.

Pronunciation

Verb

efflower (third-person singular simple present efflowers, present participle efflowering, simple past and past participle efflowered)

  1. (rare) To graze; (leatherworking) to remove the outer surface of (a skin) with a knife.
    • 1864, Andrew Ure, A Dictionary of Arts, Manufactures and Mines, volume II, Leather:
      Chamois or Shamoy leather.—The skins are first washed, limed, fleeced, and branned as above described. They are next efflowered, that is, deprived of their epidermis by a concave knife, blunt in its middle part, upon the convex horse-beam.
    • 1913, John Galen Howard, From olive groves of academe, in the University of California Chronicle, page 101:
      In the pregnant bounds / Of delicatest breath, that but efflowers the ear / And lapses into nothingness[.]
    • 1972, Sophia Frances Ann Caulfeild and ‎Blanche C. Saward, Encyclopedia of Victorian Needlework: Dictionary of Needlework, page 64:
      Chamois leather—The skin of the Alpine goat of that name, which has been “efflowered” or deprived of the epidermis.

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