Astringent - meaning and definition. What is Astringent
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What (who) is Astringent - definition

CHEMICAL COMPOUND THAT TENDS TO SHRINK OR CONSTRICT BODY TISSUES
Astringency; Astringents; Astringent (taste); Adstringent
  • A crystal of the astringent [[alum]]
  • The astringents and acids in fresh [[blackthorn]] berries (sloes) give the fruit its sourness.

astringent         
a.
Binding, contracting, styptic.
Astringent         
·adj Stern; austere; as, an astringent type of virtue.
II. Astringent ·noun A medicine or other substance that produces contraction in the soft organic textures, and checks discharges of blood, mucus, ·etc.
III. Astringent ·adj Drawing together the tissues; binding; contracting;
- opposed to laxative; as, astringent medicines; a butter and astringent taste; astringent fruit.
Astringency         
·noun The quality of being astringent; the power of contracting the parts of the body; that quality in medicines or other substances which causes contraction of the organic textures; as, the astringency of tannin.

Wikipedia

Astringent

An astringent (sometimes called adstringent) is a chemical that shrinks or constricts body tissues. The word derives from the Latin adstringere, which means "to bind fast". Calamine lotion, witch hazel, and yerba mansa, a Californian plant, are astringents, as are the powdered leaves of the myrtle.

Astringency, the dry, puckering or numbing mouthfeel caused by the tannins in unripe fruits, lets the fruit mature by deterring eating. Ripe fruits and fruit parts including blackthorn (sloe berries), Aronia chokeberry, chokecherry, bird cherry, rhubarb, quince and persimmon fruits (especially those which are unripe), banana skins (or unripe bananas), cashew fruits and acorns are astringent. Citrus fruits, like lemons, are somewhat astringent. Tannins, being a kind of polyphenol, bind salivary proteins and make them precipitate and aggregate, producing a rough, "sandpapery", or dry sensation in the mouth. The tannins in some teas, coffee, and red grape wines like Cabernet Sauvignon and Merlot produce mild astringency.

Squirrels, wild boars, and insects can eat astringent food as their tongues are able to handle the taste.

In Ayurveda, astringent is the sixth taste (after sweet, sour, salty, pungent, bitter) represented by "air and earth".

Smoking tobacco is also reported to have an astringent effect.

In a scientific study, the sensation of astringency was still able to be felt by subjects who had local anesthesia applied to their taste nerves, but not when both these and the trigeminal nerves were disabled.

Examples of use of Astringent
1. But the speech leaves an astringent aftertaste that brings it to mind days after its delivery.
2. Some were reassured by the astringent presence of Matt Rawle as Che, the show‘s skeptical narrator.
3. This astringent response would be more impressive if the basic facts about Cunningham‘s corruption hadn‘t been widely known for months.
4. Inferior creamy teas are bitter and astringent, and sometimes leave an unpleasant sour taste in the mouth, he said.
5. In 1'51, as comptroller of the Jewish Agency, he released an extremely astringent report about several officials‘ conduct.