List of synonyms from "cell-division" to synonyms from "cenobite"
Discover all the synonyms available for the terms cell division, celo-navigation, cellulite, cellulose, cemetery, cell-division and many more. Click on one of the words below and go directly to the synonyms associated with it.
Definition of the day : « cementation »
- As in coherence : noun agreement
- The product obtained by this method is known as cementation steel.
- Extract from : « Commercial Geography » by Jacques W. Redway
- The most common method of forming steel is by the process of cementation.
- Extract from : « Popular Technology; Volume 2 » by Edward Hazen
- It seems probable that the Ancients did part gold and silver by cementation.
- Extract from : « De Re Metallica » by Georgius Agricola
- That it refers to cementation at all hangs by a slender thread, but it seems more nearly this than anything else.
- Extract from : « De Re Metallica » by Georgius Agricola
- He also gives the method of parting with antimony and sulphur, and by cementation with common salt.
- Extract from : « De Re Metallica » by Georgius Agricola
- He was familiar with amalgamation, cupellation, the separation of gold and silver by cementation with salt and by nitric acid.
- Extract from : « De Re Metallica » by Georgius Agricola
- If the cementation be continued too long, the steel acquires a darkish fracture, it is more fusible, and incapable of welding.
- Extract from : « Heads of Lectures on a Course of Experimental Philosophy: Particularly Including Chemistry » by Joseph Priestley
- After cementation the plate is heated to a certain temperature and is then plunged into an oil bath in order to toughen it.
- Extract from : « Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 2, Slice 6 » by Various
- The progress of the cementation is discovered by drawing a test bar from an aperture in the side.
- Extract from : « Popular Technology; Volume 2 » by Edward Hazen
- But steel of cementation, however carefully made, is never quite equable in its texture.
- Extract from : « Popular Technology; Volume 2 » by Edward Hazen
