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waxing noun [ ˈwaksɪŋ ]

• the process of removing unwanted hair from a part of the body by applying wax and peeling off the wax and hairs together.
• "a reddish afterburn from waxing"
• a sound recording.
• "the latest waxing by the band"

wax verb

• cover or treat (something) with wax or a similar substance, typically to polish or protect it.
• "I washed and waxed the floor"
• make a recording of.
• "he waxed a series of tracks that emphasized his lead guitar work"
Origin: Old English wæx, weax, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch was and German Wachs . The verb dates from late Middle English.

wax verb

• (of the moon between new and full) have a progressively larger part of its visible surface illuminated, increasing its apparent size.
Similar: approach full moon, get bigger, increase in size, enlarge,
Opposite: wane,
• begin to speak or write about something in the specified manner.
• "they waxed lyrical about the old days"
Similar: become, grow, get, come to be, turn, become enthusiastic, enthuse, rave, gush, get carried away,
Origin: Old English weaxan, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch wassen and German wachsen, from an Indo-European root shared by Greek auxanein and Latin augere ‘to increase’.


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