English edit

Verb edit

cornified

  1. simple past and past participle of cornify

Adjective edit

cornified (comparative more cornified, superlative most cornified)

  1. Converted into horn; horny.
    • 1966, New Scientist, page 290:
      The least cornified, young cells stain violet or blue, more mature cells mauve and the most cornified, old and dying cells stain red.
    • 1998, Charles William Cummings, Charles J. Krause, David E. Schuller, Otolaryngology: Head & Neck Surgery, page 574:
      Epidermis on the palms and soles is thicker and more cornified than epidermis on other areas of the body because of frequent use and superficial trauma.
    • 2002, Douglas H. Slatter, Textbook of Small Animal Surgery, page 499:
      The filiform variety are less numerous in cats than in dogs but are more heavily cornified, with backward-pointing hooklike tips.
  2. (informal) Corny, or having been made corny.
    • 2007 December 7, Mal Vincent, “Former boy-band singer takes a risk with 'Alpha Dog’ role”, in Virginian-Pilot[1]:
      “Timberlake,” it wrote,” is the most cornified and harmless of pop stars []