Gummed in a sentence as an adjective

Lots of reels and stepper gears that get gummed up. More to learn!

Plus, their shaving cream gummed up the razor, and cleaning was a pain.

Or, if they are gumming us up, it is in response to another form of getting gummed up.

In the spring I had to take it to a lawn mower repair shop and plop down $50 just to clean out the gummed-up lines.

I bought a RS7000 from eBay and it arrived with the pots completely gummed up with second hand cheeba resin.

In general the entire economy gets gummed up from a lack of labor movement.

Right now, you just have superclasses and included modules, potentially gummed up by method_missing.

So Linus has finally annointed "the most gummed-up piece of absolute sh*t there is!

I think the worst thing is not the fire, but what happens if the wiring gets gummed up on some blades and unbalances the engine.

It might get gummed up a bit with RIP or self-harm threads but I am certain after enough time it would be net karma positive.

They are adding both charity and liquidity to a gummed-up market with very real people suffering in it.

Old computers already have coolant systems that degrade - thermoconductive paste gets brittle and cracks, fans get gummed up.

Certainly every other editor out there has realized this and has the same features, but they are gummed up by the fact that they are always in insert mode.

I wonder if anyone considered estimating the cost of fixing up a gummed up train or cleaning gum off the sidewalk and simply passed that on as a tax.

Though sometimes the works is simply gummed up by political battles and everyone's afraid to go to HR or to make an attempt to knock down those walls in fear of losing their job.

Obviously, international sanctions gummed up the project a tad and it was basically over when the scientist was assassinated.

Gummed definitions

adjective

covered with adhesive gum

See also: gummy