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TALC |
Fine powder |
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POLLEN |
Fine powder produced by plants |
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ALCOHOLIZE |
To reduce to a fine powder. |
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PURVERABLE |
Capable of being reduced to fine powder. |
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DUST |
To reduce to a fine powder; to levigate. |
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ALCOHOLIZATION |
The act of reducing a substance to a fine or
impalpable powder. |
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PULVERULENT |
Consisting of, or reducible to, fine powder; covered
with dust or powder; powdery; dusty. |
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WHARP |
A kind of fine sand from the banks of the Trent, used as a
polishing powder. |
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TRITURATE |
To rub or grind to a very fine or impalpable powder;
to pulverize and comminute thoroughly. |
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TRITURATION |
The act of triturating, or reducing to a fine or
impalpable powder by grinding, rubbing, bruising, etc. |
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LUPULIN |
The fine yellow resinous powder found upon the strobiles
or fruit of hops, and containing this bitter principle. |
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COMMINUTION |
The act of reducing to a fine powder or to small
particles; pulverization; the state of being comminuted. |
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POUNCE |
A fine powder, as of sandarac, or cuttlefish bone, --
formerly used to prevent ink from spreading on manuscript. |
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POWDER |
To reduce to fine particles; to pound, grind, or rub
into a powder; to comminute; to pulverize; to triturate. |
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GLAUCOUS |
Covered with a fine bloom or fine white powder easily
rubbed off, as that on a blue plum, or on a cabbage leaf. |
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SILICA |
Silicon dioxide, SiO/. It constitutes ordinary quartz (also
opal and tridymite), and is artifically prepared as a very fine, white,
tasteless, inodorous powder. |
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STREAK |
The fine powder or mark yielded by a mineral when scratched
or rubbed against a harder surface, the color of which is sometimes a
distinguishing character. |
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COMMINUTE |
To reduce to minute particles, or to a fine powder;
to pulverize; to triturate; to grind; as, to comminute chalk or bones;
to comminute food with the teeth. |
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CALX |
The substance which remains when a metal or mineral has been
subjected to calcination or combustion by heat, and which is, or may
be, reduced to a fine powder. |
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SIFT |
To separate with a sieve, as the fine part of a substance
from the coarse; as, to sift meal or flour; to sift powder; to sift
sand or lime. |
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OXAMIC |
Pertaining to, or designating, an acid NH2.C2O2.HO obtained
as a fine crystalline powder, intermediate between oxalic acid and
oxamide. Its amm... |
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HONE |
A stone of a fine grit, or a slab, as of metal, covered with
an abrading substance or powder, used for sharpening cutting
instruments, and especially for setting razors; an oilstone. |
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PULVERIZE |
To reduce of fine powder or dust, as by beating,
grinding, or the like; as, friable substances may be pulverized by
grinding or beating, but to... |
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FLOUR |
The finely ground meal of wheat, or of any other grain;
especially, the finer part of meal separated by bolting; hence, the
fine and soft powde... |
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LITHARGE |
Lead monoxide; a yellowish red substance, obtained as an
amorphous powder, or crystallized in fine scales, by heating lead
moderately in a curr... |