-olent, -ulent

(Latin: a suffix; full of, disposed to)

acidulent (adjective)
1. Having an acid quality; sour; acidulous.
2. To sour slightly.
benevolent (adjective)
1. Desirous of the good of others, of a kindly disposition, charitable, generous.
2. With the literal force of the Latin bene volens: Well-wishing, well-disposed to or unto others.
corpulent (adjective)
diversivolent (adjective)
Desiring strife or differences.
esculent (adjective)
Suitable to be used by people for food; eatable; edible; as, esculent plants; esculent fish.
esculent swallow
1. The swallow that makes the edible bird's-nest.
2. The nest of a small swallow (Collocalia nidifica and several allied species), of China and the neighboring countries, which is mixed with soups.

The nests are found in caverns and fissures of cliffs on rocky coasts, and are composed in part of algae. They are of the size of a goose egg, and in substance resemble isinglass.

feculent (adjective)
1. Very dirty or foul; especially, polluted by excrement.
2. Foul with waste matter; of or relating to feces.
3. Full of dregs or fecal matter; foul, turbid, or muddy.
4. Filthy, scummy, muddy or foul; containing waste matter.
5. Etymology: from French feculent from Latin faeculentus, "abounding in dregs, full of excrement" from Latin faeces; plural of faex, "dregs, sediment".
flatulent (adjective)
Affected with or characterized by flatus (gas in the the stomach or the intestinal tract) or flatulence (excessive amount of gas in the stomach or intestine).
flocculent (adjective)
1. Having a fluffy or woolly appearance.
2. Composed of or containing wooly masses.
3. A reference to a fluid or culture containing whitish shreds of mucus.
4. Flaky, waxy, and woollike, as the secretion covering some insects.
fraudulent (adjective)
1. Engaging in fraud; deceitful; not honest, true, or fair, and intended to deceive people.
2. Characterized by, constituting, or gained by fraud; such as, fraudulent business practices.
3. Etymology: Middle English, from Old French, from Latin fraudulentus, from fraus, fraud, "deceit".
indolent (adjective)
1. In medicine, causing little or no pain; such as, a tumor.
2. Slow to heal, to grow, or to develop; for example, an ulcer; or a wound that heals very slowly.
3. Disinclined to exert oneself; habitually lazy.
4. Disliking work; lazy; idle: "The man was an indolent person who disliked any kind of exertion."
inesculent (adjective)
Unedible; not for eating.
inopulent (adjective)
Not opulent; not affluent or rich.
insolent (adjective)
1. Showing an aggressive lack of respect in speech or behavior; disrespectful.
2. Presumptuous and insulting in manner or speech; arrogant.
3. Audaciously rude or disrespectful; impertinent.
4. Unrestrained by convention or propriety.
lutulent (adjective)
Muddy, filthy, impure; turbid, thick.