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  1. Dictionary
    succulent
    /ˈsʌkjʊlənt/

    adjective

    • 1. (of food) tender, juicy, and tasty: "a succulent steak"
    • 2. (of a plant, especially a xerophyte) having thick fleshy leaves or stems adapted to storing water: "the ever-increasing popularity of succulent plants"

    noun

    • 1. a succulent plant: "a book on cacti and succulents"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. SUCCULENT definition: 1. Succulent food is pleasantly juicy: 2. a plant such as a cactus in which the leaves and stem…. Learn more.

  3. The meaning of SUCCULENT is full of juice : juicy. How to use succulent in a sentence.

  4. noun. a plant that is able to exist in arid or salty conditions by using water stored in its fleshy tissues. succulent. / sŭk ′ yə-lənt / Any of various plants having fleshy leaves or stems that store water. Cacti and the jade plant are succulents.

  5. SUCCULENT meaning: 1. Succulent food is pleasantly juicy: 2. a plant such as a cactus in which the leaves and stem…. Learn more.

  6. (sʌkjʊlənt ) Word forms: plural succulents. 1. adjective. Succulent food, especially meat or vegetables, is juicy and good to eat. [approval] Cook pieces of succulent chicken with ample garlic and a little sherry. ...succulent early vegetables. Synonyms: juicy, moist, luscious, rich More Synonyms of succulent. 2. countable noun.

  7. 1. Full of juice or sap; juicy. 2. Botany Having thick, fleshy, water-storing leaves or stems. 3. Highly interesting or enjoyable; delectable: a succulent bit of gossip. n. Botany. A succulent plant, such as a sedum or cactus. [Latin succulentus, from succus, juice; see seuə- in Indo-European roots .] suc′cu·lence, suc′cu·len·cy n.

  8. Succulent, any plant with thick fleshy tissues adapted to water storage. Some succulents, such as cacti, store water only in the stem and commonly lack leaves. Others, such as agaves and kalanchoes, store water mainly in the leaves.

  9. Succulent means "juicy" and is often used to describe food. Think a succulent piece of meat, or berries so succulent you’re left sucking juice off your fingertips when you eat them.

  10. SUCCULENT definition: If food is succulent, it is good to eat because it has a lot of juice: . Learn more.

  11. Origin succulent (1600-1700) Latin suculentus, from sucus “juice”. succulent meaning, definition, what is succulent: juicy and good to eat: Learn more.