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deliquium
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deliquium
▪ I. deliquium1 arch. (dɪˈlɪkwɪəm) [L. dēliquium failure, want, f. dēlinquĕre (dēliqu-): see delinque, delict, and cf. delique.] 1. Failure of the vital powers; a swoon, fainting fit. Also fig.[1597 J. King On Jonas (1864) 180 (Stanf.) His soul forsook him, as it were, and there was deliquium animæ....
Oxford English Dictionary
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deliquiate
† deˈliquiate, v. Chem. Obs. [irreg. f. L. dēliquāre (deliquate), or f. deliquium2.] intr. = deliquate 2, deliquesce.1782 Wedgwood in Phil. Trans. LXX. 323 No crystalization was formed: the dry salt..deliquiated in the air. 1810 Henry Elem. Chem. (1840) II. 397 Urea..deliquiates, when exposed to the...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Zoya Cherkassky-Nnadi
Victims," as well as the struggles these new immigrants faced when trying to fully integrate into the Jewish lifestyle, as can be seen in "The Rabbi's Deliquium
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delique
† deˈlique Obs. rare. [ad. L. dēliquium: see below; cf. relique.] = deliquium1 1; failure.1645 Rutherford Tryal & Tri. Faith (1845) 71 It cometh from a delique in the affections..that there is a swooning and delique of words.
Oxford English Dictionary
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Ernesto Tomasini
Kurt Weill Fest (concert – 2013, D)
Poems After Lorca at the Cadogan Hall, London (concert −2014, UK)
Pineal at the Garage, London (concert – 2014, UK)
Deliquium
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menstruum
‖ menstruum (ˈmɛnstruːəm) Pl. menstrua (ˈmɛnstruːə). Also 7 erron. menstrum. [L., neut. of mēnstruus adj., monthly, f. mēns-, mēnsis month. Cf. F. menstrue sing., menstruum, solvent, menstrues pl., monthly courses (also OF. menstre), Pr. mestruas pl., Sp., It. menstruo. In classical Latin the n. occ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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List of alchemical substances
Oil of tartar – concentrated potassium carbonate, K2CO3 solution
Oil of tartar per deliquium – potassium carbonate dissolved in the water which its extracts
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tartar
▪ I. tartar, n.1 (ˈtɑːtə(r)) Also 4 tartre, 5 tarter, -are, (6 tartarum, 7–8 tartarus). [a. F. tartre = Sp., Pg., It. tartaro, med.L. tartarum (tartharum), med.Gr. τάρταρον; perh. of Arabic origin: Simon of Genoa (fl. 1292), Synonima (ed. 1473), has ‘Tartar arabice, tartarum quod ex uino in lateribu...
Oxford English Dictionary
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potash
potash, n. (ˈpɒtæʃ) [Early mod.E. pot-ashes pl., app. ad. Du. pot-asschen (1599 Kilian, ‘quod in ollis{ddd}asseruentur, ne liquescentes effluant’), mod.Du. potasch; so Ger. pottasche, Swed. pottaska, Da. potaske; also F. potasse (1577 pottas, at Liège, Godef.), It., Pg., mod.L. potassa, Sp. potasa.]...
Oxford English Dictionary
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melting
▪ I. melting, vbl. n. (ˈmɛltɪŋ) [f. melt v.1 + -ing1.] 1. The action of the vb. melt; an instance of this.1390–1 Earl Derby's Exp. (Camden) 86 Et pro meltyng de sepo et iiij lb. pinguedinum, vj s. pr. 1444 Rolls of Parlt. V. 109/1 The maistr' of his mynt..to have and take for his labour of double me...
Oxford English Dictionary
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per
▪ I. per, prep. (pə(r), pɜː(r)) A Latin (Ital. and Old French) preposition, meaning ‘through, by, by means of’; in med.L. and Fr. also in a distributive sense = ‘for every{ddd}, for each{ddd}’: used in Eng. in various Latin and OF. phrases, and ultimately becoming practically an Eng. preposition use...
Oxford English Dictionary
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