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Definitions

lubricious

[loo-brish-uhs] / luˈbrɪʃ əs /




Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Mashing pentagrams, Prince Andrew and autoerotic asphyxiation into a lubricious slop, “The Scary of Sixty-First” feels suffocating and flat.

From New York Times

In 1993 the New York Times noted how “lady luck” was resistant to his “lubricious charm”.

From The Guardian

Notorious turns full-circle on its initially lubricious premise, and offers us both a sexpionage thriller and a sensual romance – and something much more ethically murky and fascinating than both.

From The Guardian

One of the oddest things about this film is how many of the oddities, especially the more lubricious ones, are true.

From The New Yorker

These ghosts can be nosy and lubricious, as in George Saunders’s “Lincoln in the Bardo,” which followed a group of spectral busybodies in purgatory, observing the arrival of Abraham Lincoln’s newly deceased young son.

From New York Times