blotted








noun

  1. a spot or stain, especially of ink on paper.
  2. a blemish on a person’s character or reputation: He had been haunted by a blot on his past.
  3. Archaic. an erasure or obliteration, as in a writing.

verb (used with object), blot·ted, blot·ting.

  1. to spot, stain, soil, or the like.
  2. to darken; make dim; obscure or eclipse (usually followed by out): We watched as the moon blotted out the sun.
  3. to dry with absorbent paper or the like: to blot the wet pane.
  4. to remove with absorbent paper or the like.

verb (used without object), blot·ted, blot·ting.

  1. to make a blot; spread ink, dye, etc., in a stain: The more slowly I write, the more this pen blots.
  2. to become blotted or stained: This paper blots too easily.
  3. Chemistry. to transfer an array of separated components of a mixture to a chemically treated paper for analysis.Compare gel, gel electrophoresis.

Verb Phrases

  1. blot out,
    1. to make indistinguishable; obliterate: to blot out a name from the record.
    2. to wipe out completely; destroy: Whole cities were blotted out by bombs.

noun

  1. a stain or spot of ink, paint, dirt, etc
  2. something that spoils or detracts from the beauty or worth of something
  3. a blemish or stain on one’s character or reputation

verb blots, blotting or blotted

  1. (of ink, dye, etc) to form spots or blobs on (a material) or (of a person) to cause such spots or blobs to form on (a material)
  2. blot one’s copybook informal to spoil one’s reputation by making a mistake, offending against social customs, etc
  3. (intr) to stain or become stained or spotted
  4. (tr) to cause a blemish in or on; disgrace
  5. to soak up (excess ink, etc) by using blotting paper or some other absorbent material
  6. (of blotting paper or some other absorbent material) to absorb (excess ink, etc)
  7. (tr often foll by out)
    1. to darken or hide completely; obscure; obliterate
    2. to destroy; annihilate

noun

  1. backgammon a man exposed by being placed alone on a point and therefore able to be taken by the other player
  2. archaic a weak spot
n.

late 14c., originally “blemish,” perhaps from Old Norse blettr “blot, stain,” or from Old French blot, variant of bloc “block,” or blestre “blister, lump, clump of earth.”

v.

early 15c., “to make blots;” mid-15c. “to blot out, obliterate” (words), from blot (n.). Related: Blotted; blotting.

n.

  1. The Northern, Southern, or Western blot analyses.
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