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anthracite
[ an-thruh-sahyt ]
noun
- a mineral coal containing little of the volatile hydrocarbons and burning almost without flame; hard coal.
anthracite
/ ˈænθrəˌsaɪt; ˌænθrəˈsɪtɪk /
noun
- a hard jet-black coal that burns slowly with a nonluminous flame giving out intense heat. Fixed carbon content: 86–98 per cent; calorific value: 3.14 × 10 7–3.63 × 10 7J/kg Also calledhard coal
anthracite
/ ăn′thrə-sīt′ /
- A hard, shiny coal that has a high carbon content. It is valued as a fuel because it burns with a clean flame and without smoke or odor, but it is much less abundant than bituminous coal.
- Compare bituminous coal
Derived Forms
- anthracitic, adjective
Other Words From
- an·thra·cit·ic [an-thr, uh, -, sit, -ik], an·thra·cit·ous [an, -thr, uh, -sahy-t, uh, s], adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of anthracite1
Word History and Origins
Origin of anthracite1
Compare Meanings
How does anthracite compare to similar and commonly confused words? Explore the most common comparisons:
Example Sentences
They grabbed the easel, found crimson and anthracite paint and splattered the colors across the canvas.
Born in 1908, the oldest son of Lithuanian immigrants, my father started working as a breaker boy in the anthracite coal region of Pennsylvania when he was 6 years old.
Rival steelmaker Arcelormittal Nippon Steel India shipped in 35,000 tonnes of Russian anthracite coal using euros, a customs document dated June 15 showed.
The colliery is the only producer of high-grade anthracite in western Europe and supplies the nearby Tata Steel plant in Port Talbot.
Heavy equipment excavate anthracite coal from a strip mine in New Castle, Pennsylvania, U.S.,
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