v. [f. LIQUID a. + -IZE.] trans. To make liquid, in various senses.
1837. New Monthly Mag., L. 72. The coffee-jug, which he at times applied to his lips, seemed to liquidize his imagination. Ibid. (1840), LIX. 204. It should be liquidized in a silver saucepan.
1880. Libr. Univ. Knowl. (N.Y.), X. 696. This also liquidizes all broad vowels, when a corresponding termination has dropped.
1887. Mary Linskill, In Exchange for a Soul, III. lv. 113. The bells were ringing softly, the softer for the nearness of the water, which seems always to liquidise the sound.