incarnative means causing growth of new flesh i.e. healing or regenerative. Lexicurio rates it Sui generis — a strength score of 87 out of 100.
Why “incarnative” is a great word
INCARNATIVE — [Adjective] Causing the growth of new flesh; healing or regenerative. From Middle English incarnatif, from Medieval Latin incarnātīvus, from Latin incarnātus (past participle of incarnāre, 'to make flesh') + -īvus ('-ive', adjectival suffix). First attested c1400. Unlike "cicatrizant" (which specifically seals a wound with scar tissue) or "palliative" (which merely soothes without mending), incarnative denotes the active, cellular work of reconstruction. It is the raw pink granulation of a deep cut beginning to fill, the patient knitting beneath a plaster cast, and the precise biological script of regrowth—a quiet, physical argument against entropy.
adj
- Causing growth of new flesh i.e. healing or regenerative.
noun
- Any incarnative medicine.