See also: lip balm

English edit

Noun edit

lipbalm (countable and uncountable, plural lipbalms)

  1. Alternative form of lip balm.
    • 2012, Melody James, Stupid Cupid (Signs of Love), London: Simon and Schuster, →ISBN, page 24:
      Savannah pulls a pot of strawberry lipbalm from her blazer pocket. ‘This weather is murder on my lips.’ As she flicks off the lid, her mouth drops open. ‘Look!’ She thrusts the balm under my nose. [] ‘The marks in the lipbalm.’ She points at a couple of smears in the pink goo. ‘It definitely says LJ!’
    • 2017, Jasmine Hemsley, East by West: Simple Ayurvedic Recipes for Ultimate Mind-Body Balance, London: Bluebird, Pan Macmillan, →ISBN, page 294:
      Stick to gentle and natural skincare and make-up which is absorbed into our body via our largest organ – the skin. Such natural products are both good for us and our environment. Not only is the variety of natural beauty products improving, but so too is their performance power, as more and more companies look into feeding this new appetite. Pay special attention to lipsticks and lipbalms, since most of this ends up getting eaten!
    • 2017, Helen McClory, Flesh of the Peach, Glasgow: Freight Books, →ISBN, pages 16 and 160:
      Kennedy’s lipbalm, a tin of organic beeswax, smelling like boiled strawberries. [] Shotgun shells looked like chemist shop lipbalm casings.