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pectose
pectose Chem. (ˈpɛktəʊs) [f. stem pect- of pectic + -ose.] An insoluble substance related to cellulose and occurring with it in vegetable tissues, esp. in unripe fruits and fleshy roots; by the action of acids, etc. it is converted into pectin.1857 W. A. Miller Elem. Chem. III. 83 The cellular tissu...
Oxford English Dictionary
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pectase
pectase Chem. (ˈpɛkteɪs) [f. pect-in or pect-ose, after diastase.] A ferment supposed to exist in fruits, etc., and having the property of converting pectin into pectic and other related acids. Now usu. called pectinesterase.1866–77 Watts Dict. Chem. IV. 363 According to Frémy, all vegetal tissues w...
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List of Chlorophyceae genera
Green algae usually have a rigid cell wall made up of an inner layer of cellulose and outer layer of pectose.
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pectin
pectin Chem. (ˈpɛktɪn) [f. stem pect- of pectic + -in1.] 1. a. A white neutral substance, soluble in water, formed from pectose by heating with acids, or naturally in the ripening of fruits, and constituting the gelatinizing agent in vegetable juices; in the further process of ripening, it is conver...
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Oedogonium
Every cell of the filament has a cell wall consisting of three layers – the innermost is made of cellulose, the middle of pectose, and the outermost is
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protopectin
protoˈpectin Biochem. [ad. G. protopektin (A. Tschirch-Bern 1907, in Ber. d. Deut. Pharm. Ges. XVII. 242): see proto- and pectin.] = pectose.1908 Chem. Abstr. II. 431 (heading) On pectin and protopectin. 1922 Biochemical Jrnl. XVI. 704 The soluble pectin probably develops from an insoluble pectic su...
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Wet process engineering
reagent used in the cotton scouring is sodium hydroxide, which converts saponifiable fats and oils into soaps, dissolves mineral matter and converts pectose
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vegetal
vegetal, a. and n. (ˈvɛdʒɪtəl) Forms: 5 vegytalle, vygital, 6–7 vegitall, 7 vegital, vegetall, 7– vegetal. [ad. med.L. *vegetālis, f. L. vegetāre: see vegetate v. Cf. F. végétal (16th c.), Sp. and Pg. vegetal, It. vegetale.] A. adj. 1. a. Characterized by, exhibiting or producing, the phenomena of p...
Oxford English Dictionary
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para-
▪ I. para-1 (pærə) before a vowel or h usually par-, repr. Gr. παρα-, παρ-, combining form of παρά prep., occurring in words already formed in Greek, their adaptations, and derivatives, and in modern words formed on the model of these, and, in certain uses, as a living element, in the formation of t...
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vegetable
▪ I. vegetable, n. (ˈvɛdʒɪtəb(ə)l) Also 6 vegitable. [f. the adj.] 1. a. A living organism belonging to the vegetable kingdom or the lower of the two series of organic beings; a growth devoid of animal life; a plant in the widest or scientific sense (= plant n.1 2).1582 J. Hester Compendium Ration. ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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