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phosphatic
[ fos-fat-ik, -fey-tik ]
Other Words From
- nonphos·phatic adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of phosphatic1
Example Sentences
Animals could soak up so much, in fact, that they could fashion thick and durable shells, as hard as the hardest tissue in the human body — the phosphatic enamel of our teeth.
A 2016 economic impact study prepared for Port Tampa Bay found that the phosphatic fertilizer industry generated $12.2 billion in total economic value to that region alone.
Photographs showed Kim cutting a large red ribbon to open the Sunchon Phosphatic Fertilizer Factory, with his sister Kim Yo Jong in the background.
Phosphatic nodules have been excavated from the base of the Chalk Marl at several places along the outcrop; the Marl is worked for cement.
When the vomited liquid is allowed to stand, a sediment forms in it which is composed almost entirely of epithelial scales, more or less modified in their appearance by the accidental contents of the stomach, and a film covers its surface in which globules of fat and phosphatic crystals may be detected.
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