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Gorilla glue uses isocyanates to produce polyurethane. Gorilla glue in "drying" is really just crosslinking of the polymer chains, forming polyurethane, a chemical reaction. Water, all by itself, reacts with the stuff to form the polymer. It won't form slime; it'll just set up. The stuff is toxic, nasty, and dangerous. Kids shouldn't be around Gorilla Glue. The other reactant is water. It produces CO2, which is why it foams. Mixing Gorilla glue and water in the kinds of quantities you must be talking about would be a dangerous mess.
White glue has polyvinyl acetate in it. So do some wood glues. (Polyvinyl acetate = PVA) When PVA glues dry they really just dry; the polymers already in the glue just have all the water go away so that they form the plastic. There's no chemical reaction in that.
Making slime involves a chemical reaction, the borates reacting with the polyvinyl acetate in the glues to crosslink the vinyl chains. Really, in the same kind of way (with all the details different) as the formation of the polyurethane. The difference in the wood and white glues will involve either different pHs or "contaminants" (from the point of view of the primary reaction, which is ). Add a few drops of ammonia and see if the wood glue/borax slime goes any faster.
Note that a lot of carpenter's glues use casein. Perhaps in combination with the PVA. Dunno enough about casein to say if it's likely to react with the borax. Sort of doubt it, but it's not a strong doubt.
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