0 past simple and past participle of coagulate
1 to change from liquid to a more solid state, or to cause something to do this:
Others prevent the blood from coagulating in the vessels and dissolve blood that may have already coagulated.
In preparation for assay, the samples were rapidly thawed and centrifuged for 10 min to remove coagulated protein and other insoluble material.
The coagulated tumor is converted into a scar or a cyst by the body's immune system.
The acid could no longer be seen as merely an external, mechanical instrument; it was now necessary to explain why it "coagulated" with a metal.
The "coagulated dissolutions" obtained from lead or iron consist of various chemical substances, each of which remains unaltered in the compound.
The sheer quantity of volumes has coagulated the categorisation and locational systems, convoluted the access and retrieval procedures and converted security and preservation into paranoia.
Coagulated blood in the vessels can form a clot (thrombus) that obstructs circulation or, in the worst-case scenario, stops circulation.
However, the "coagulated" material was not - according to the general use of "coagulated" - one uniform and homogeneous substance but rather two substances.