farinaceous

Etymology
From.

Adjective

 * 1) Made from, or rich in, starch or flour.
 * 2) Having a floury texture; grainy.
 * 3) * 2007 May 22, Victoria Summerley, “It does us good to get our hands dirty”, in The Independent Online:
 * In the Great Pavilion, the nurserymen and women have been employing their dark arts, too; coaxing agapanthus into bloom two months early, cosseting iris with wads of strategically placed cotton wool or touching up the farinaceous, fan-shaped fronds of a Bismarck palm with face powder.
 * 1) Having a floury texture; grainy.
 * 2) * 2007 May 22, Victoria Summerley, “It does us good to get our hands dirty”, in The Independent Online:
 * In the Great Pavilion, the nurserymen and women have been employing their dark arts, too; coaxing agapanthus into bloom two months early, cosseting iris with wads of strategically placed cotton wool or touching up the farinaceous, fan-shaped fronds of a Bismarck palm with face powder.

Translations

 * Bulgarian:
 * Irish: plúrach, plúrmhar
 * Italian:
 * Swedish:
 * Turkish:, unlu


 * French:
 * Irish: plúrach, plúrmhar
 * Swedish: ,