a. rare. [See prec. and -OUS.] Lotus-eating, resembling the Lotophagi. Hence Lotophagously adv.

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1855.  Emerson, in Corr. w. Carlyle, II. 244. I have even fancied you did me a harm by the valued gift of Antony Wood; which and the like of which I take a lotophagous pleasure in eating.

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1882.  Pidgeon, Engineer’s Holiday, I. 83. Thus lotophagously sailing, we landed one morning on a beautifully wooded point.

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