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    Synonyms and Definitions

    Use "carbonate" in a sentence

    carbonate example sentences

    carbonate


    carbonated


    carbonates


    carbonating


    1. After Abadan there had been a string of harbours we called into, people I met, adventures I survived and inconveniences I overcame, including the tyranny of the mean-spirited chief steward who, instead of spending money on detergent or soap, for months made me use sodium carbonate to wash the piles and piles of dishes until my fingers nearly fell off


    2. carbonate) is removed in a first stage


    3. in the bioerosion of carbonate shells and hardgrounds


    4. dissolution of carbonate deposited on all ocean basins


    5. grain is SODIUM CARBONATE which dissolves in water


    6. with, pH, ammonia, nitrite, nitrate, and carbonate hardness (KH)


    7. CO2 lowers the pH in the chamber and dissolves the calcium carbonate thereby releasing


    8. The carbonate hardness of saltwater can give you a good indication of how stable your pH is


    9. dosing liquid calcium is that you have to also use a buffer (carbonate or bicarbonate) when you


    10. Carbonate Hardness is

    11. Carbonate Hardness measures just the carbonates and bicarbonates while Alkalinity measures


    12. calcium is that you have to also use a buffer (carbonate or bicarbonate) when you dose


    13. abbreviation for Degrees of Carbonate Hardness and is a measurement of total alkalinity


    14. 'I'd appreciate it if you gave the sodium carbonate settings a once over while you are here


    15. Stalactites are formed by the deposition of calcium carbonate and other


    16. Winstock AR, Lea T, Copeland J (2009) Lithium carbonate in the management of cannabis


    17. Hoboken, where I discovered native carbonate of magnesia, is situated opposite the city of New-York, on the western or New-Jersey bank of the Hudson


    18. The carbonate of magnesia I found in horizontal veins of nearly two inches in breadth, and of unknown depth, in a midway region of this serpentine ledge; I extracted a considerable quantity with a spoon


    19. It differs little from the manufactured carbonate of magnesia of the shops; but is rather a super than a sub-carbonate


    20. Pierce's discovery is not less interesting; and we presume he will be deemed correct in the opinion, that pure native carbonate of magnesia has not been discovered before

    21. The piece weighs almost six pounds; it is fine virgin copper, with rudiments of large octahedral crystals of native copper upon its surface, which is more or less incrusted with green carbonate of copper and ruby oxid, very much resembling that of Cornwall: the ruby oxid is particularly remarkable in the cavities of the piece


    22. It is interspersed with veins of the crystallized carbonate of lime, more or less perfect, and of a pure but opaque white


    23. The silicious carbonate of lime may be worth distinguishing from the common limestone


    24. Stalagmites again rise from the floor like so many statues; the irregular sides of the ledges of rocks are often incrusted over with white crystals of the carbonate of lime, and have the appearance of banks of salt: at times we seem to walk on diamond pavements; again our footway is of rounded pebbles, and seems the bed of a river which had deserted its channel


    25. Discovery of Native Crystallized Carbonate of Magnesia on Staten-Island, with a Notice of its Geology, by James Pierce, Esq


    26. Green Carbonate of Copper—in greenstone, in Greenfield


    27. Carbonate of lime, crystallized, is sometimes found; and many of the caves afford fine stalactites


    28. Discovery of Native Crystallized Carbonate of Magnesia on Staten-Island, with a Notice of the Geology and Mineralogy of that Island, by James Pierce, Esq


    29. I forward you a few mineral specimens characteristic of Staten-Island, including native carbonate of magnesia, in acicular crystals


    30. The magnesite was found to embrace veins and cavities containing native carbonate of magnesia, in very white acicular crystals, grouped in minute fibres radiating from the sides, but not always filling the veins and cavities

    31. This carbonate of magnesia dissolves entirely in diluted sulphuric acid, with considerable effervescence and chemical action, producing a bitter compound, from which salts of easy solution are formed by evaporation


    32. The magnesite in which these crystals are found, appears to be composed of carbonate of magnesia, steatite, and talc, disintegrating readily upon exposure to air and moisture: it effervesces considerably in sulphuric acid, forming a very bitter fluid that soon exhibits crystals, indicating that magnesia enters in large proportion into its constitution


    33. Every spring and every rivulet, is strongly impregnated with carbonate of lime


    34. With quartz, carbonate of lime, &c


    35. This carbonate of lime is of a pale sky-blue colour; effervesces strongly with nitric acid; and, by burning, produces lime, so that there is no question as to the identity of the mineral


    36. To the filtered solution, reduced by evaporation, carbonate of potash was added, the precipitate was collected on a filter, washed and dried; it weighed 23 parts


    37. Between the strata are crystals of carbonate of lime, rhomboidal, and tending to the lenticular form


    38. On some scattered fragments on this river, are found carbonate of lime in crystals, with pieces of white feldspar


    39. Some of this residue dissolved in distilled water, was tested with carbonate of soda, forming an immediate white cloud; with nitrate of barytes, the same; with ammonia, the same; but with oxalate of ammonia, it did not form any cloud until it had stood some time, and then it was slight


    40. The new compound, on examination, proved to be muriate of lime; so that it may be concluded the residuum (7) was principally carbonate of lime

    41. On considering the results of the preceding experiments, it will appear that more than one half of the substances submitted to analysis, was easily soluble in water, and from the chemical tests used, that it was composed principally of sulphate of magnesia, (Epsom salt) with perhaps a small portion of muriate of lime or magnesia, that of the remainder, about ⅕ was sulphate of lime, and difficultly soluble in water; and that the rest was perfectly insoluble in water, and consisted principally of carbonate of lime


    42. Carbonate of soda produced no effect


    43. Hard carbonate of lime, 63


    44. —, native carbonate of, see Witherite


    45. Carbonate of lime in calcareous substances, new instrument for estimating, J


    46. —, —, and not carbonate in the waters of Pyrmont, xv, 185


    47. carbonate of iron, 244;


    48. Phosphates of alkalies, action of, on carbonate of lime, &c


    49. , native carbonate of magnesia on Staten Island, i, 142


    50. —, instrument for estimating the carbonate of lime in calcareous substances, xlv, 262





    1. ~ con gas carbonated water


    2. who could drink the most carbonated mouthfuls without belching


    3. beverage market, second only to carbonated soft


    4. limes, cherries, pop, carbonated water, juice, olives, and


    5. In Riverside, California, kissing on the lips, unless both parties wipe their lips with carbonated rose water, is against the local health ordinance


    6. carbonated pop and the caffeine made me feel a bit better," said Cynthia


    7. sandwiches, cut in halves, and an iced, carbonated drink


    8. Durian and carbonated drinks do not


    9. Chewing food well before swallowing, talking less during meals, eating slowly and avoiding carbonated drinks will reduce the amount of swallowed air


    10. Durian and carbonated drinks do not mix well in the stomach and has been

    11. bone fractures, although short-term consumption of carbonated beverages has not


    12. Over 95% of the ascorbic acid�s acidity in this effervescent reaction is neutralized resulting in a carbonated drink similar to mineral water


    13. The lemon and soda will give it a pleasant fresh and slightly carbonated taste


    14. The overeating and the consumption of carbonated beverages provide for the bloating of the stomach


    15. We wore togas (bedsheets unenthusiastically supplied to us by our mothers) and wreaths made out of pipe cleaners, and had a feast of whole roast chickens and carbonated grape juice, which we ate with our hands, like the Romans


    16. — minerals, on the treatment of, by carbonated alkalies, xviii, 404


    1. as sulfates and carbonates


    2. elements such as carbonates, bicarbonates and some other elements


    3. Carbonate Hardness measures just the carbonates and bicarbonates while Alkalinity measures


    4. kit will measure the levels of elements such as carbonates, bicarbonates and some other


    5. Carbonates of magnesia, hitherto discovered, have been, I believe, found impure, and in a state of rock, requiring chemical process to render them serviceable; this is, perhaps, fit for immediate use


    6. In this collection were observed many forms of the crystallized hard carbonates of lime, of Count Bournon


    7. Hard Carbonates of Lime


    8. Under the head of hard carbonates should be mentioned an extensive bed or vein in Montgomery County in the State of Virginia, near the seat of Colonel Hancock


    9. The blue limestone appears frequently enough to satisfy us that it is the groundwork of the whole; but it is almost every where covered with incrustations of the hard carbonates


    10. — and soda, mixture of pure carbonates of, xlix, 195

    11. —, new instruments and processes for the analysis of the carbonates, xlvi, 346


    12. Apparatus for Analysis of the Carbonates, 351


    1. Every airman was given a “Mae West” life vest,* but because some men stole the vests’ carbon dioxide cartridges for use in carbonating drinks, some vests didn’t inflate


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    "carbonate" definitions

    a salt or ester of carbonic acid (containing the anion CO3)


    turn into a carbonate


    treat with carbon dioxide