i Register
In some senses, phlegm is marked as historical. Watch for register when choosing this word.
noun
One of the four humors making up the body in ancient and mediaeval medicine; said to be cold and moist, and often identified with mucus.
Each person's unique mixture of these substances determines his temperament: a predominance of blood gives a sanguine temperament; a predominance of phlegm makes one phlegmatic; yellow bile, bilious (or choleric); and black bile, melancholic.
Viscid mucus produced by the body, later especially mucus expelled from the bronchial passages by coughing.
Even some members of the new bourgeoisie indulge in conspicuously boorish behavior, like hawking phlegm onto the pavement or picking their noses at business meetings.
A watery distillation, especially one obtained from plant matter; an aqueous solution.
The attempts made to analyse vegetable substances previous to 1720, merely produced their resolution into the supposed elements of the chemists of those days, namely, salts, Earths, phlegm, and sulphur.
Calmness of temperament, composure; also seen negatively, sluggishness, indifference.
Orloff's phlegm broke completely, and he snatched at the monocle as it dropped[.]
But Swedish Nazis also talked of the necessity of saving Sweden from Bolshevism, and with the menacing Berlin radio gnawing in their ears many Swedes lost their Scandinavian phlegm.