Defn: Sugar boiled down from cane juice to a solid mass.
CONCRETE
Con*crete", v. i. [imp. & p. p. Concreted; p. pr & vb. n.
Concreting.]
Defn: To unite or coalesce, as separate particles, into a mass or solid body.
Note: Applied to some substances, it is equivalent to indurate; as, metallic matter concretes into a hard body; applied to others, it is equivalent to congeal, thicken, inspissate, coagulate, as in the concretion of blood. "The blood of some who died of the plague could not be made to concrete." Arbuthnot.
CONCRETE
Con*crete", v. t.
1. To form into a mass, as by the cohesion or coalescence of separate particles. There are in our inferior world divers bodies that are concreted out of others. Sir M. Hale.
2. To cover with, or form of, concrete, as a pavement.
CONCRETELY
Con*crete"ly, adv.
Defn: In a concrete manner.
CONCRETENESS
Con*crete"ness, n.