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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
ointment
noun
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a fly in the ointment
▪ There had to be a snag, of course, a fly in the ointment.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ The ointment, made from plants, is applied directly to burned skin.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Cotton buds. for administering and wiping away surplus ointment, antiseptic washes etc.
▪ Do not break any blisters or put any lotions, potions or magic ointments on the burn.
▪ I make up my own recipe for stretch mark ointment and of course she was thrilled to have it.
▪ Measuring the infant, administering vitamin K and eye ointment, and bathing the infant must be saved for later. 6.
▪ There had to be a snag, of course, a fly in the ointment.
▪ There was only one fly in the ointment - but it was the smallest, most insignificant of flies.
▪ We're very happy, but the largest fly in the ointment is his friend Rita.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Ointment

Ointment \Oint"ment\, n. [OE. oinement, OF. oignement, fr. F. oindre to anoint, L. ungere, unguere; akin to Skr. a[~n]j, and to G. anke (in Switzerland) butter. The first t in the E. word is due to the influence of anoint. Cf. Anoint, Unguent.] That which serves to anoint; any soft unctuous substance used for smearing or anointing; an unguent.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
ointment

late 13c., from Old French oignement "ointment, salve, unguent," from Vulgar Latin *unguimentum, from Latin unguentum (see unguent). The first -t- emerged in Old French from oint, past participle of verb oindre "to anoint."

Wiktionary
ointment

n. (context medicine English) A viscous preparation of oils and/or fats, usually containing medication, used as a treatment or as an emollient.

WordNet
ointment
  1. n. semisolid preparation (usually containing a medicine) applied externally as a remedy or for soothing an irritation [syn: unction, unguent, balm, salve]

  2. toiletry consisting of any of various substances resembling cream that have a soothing and moisturizing effect when applied to the skin [syn: cream, emollient]

Wikipedia

Usage examples of "ointment".

The skin of this young creature, from continual ablutions and the use of mollifying ointments, was inconceivably smooth and soft.

For the first time in three years neat tubes of aureomycin ointment for udder sores were neatly stacked in the old space on the shelf.

She had isopropyl alcohol, peroxide, cotton balls, Band-Aids, Q-Tips, zinc ointment, Bacitracin, an Ace bandage, and a small bottle of Mercurochrome.

He let the private get up at last and get dressed, then sent him off with some bacitracin ointment and a jock strap.

Her arm, she discovered, was bandaged heavily over some slick and foul-smelling ointment.

Parkinson speaks highly of the bruised herb, or of its expressed juice, for scrofulous swellings when applied outwardly in the form of an ointment.

The bruised herb, or an ointment made from it, is applied by rustics to heal fresh cuts and contusions.

An ancient nun came from the convent to spread a soothing ointment over his skin, all the while clucking her tongue.

It also seems to deodorize foul-smelling sores when applied in an ointment.

In rifling the closet of the ladie, they found a wafer of sacramental bread, having the divels name stamped thereon in steed of JESUS Christ, and a pipe of ointment, wherewith she greased a staffe, upon whish she ambled and gallopped through thicke and thin when and in what manner she listed.

Against ringworm an ointment made with one drachm of thymol to an ounce of soft paraffin is found to be a sure specific.

While Bulen gave his boots a much-needed blacking, Lan washed himself from head to toe at the washstand rather than waiting for a bathtub to be brought, and dabbed an ointment that Anya sent Esne for onto his welts, but he let the women dress him.

The last of my vertebral bones, called by doctors the os sacrum, felt as if it had been crushed to atoms, although I had used almost the whole of a pot of ointment which Esther had given me for that purpose.

I begged her to do my hair, intending to dismiss her directly after, but when she had finished I asked her to give me the ointment.

She was obliged to touch it to continue rubbing the ointment in, and I saw that she liked it, as she touched it when she had no need, and not being able to stand it any longer I took hold of her hand and made her stop her work in favour of a pleasanter employment.