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carbonate
[ noun kahr-buh-neyt, -nit; verb kahr-buh-neyt ]
verb (used with object)
- to form into a carbonate.
- to charge or impregnate with carbon dioxide:
carbonated drinks.
- to make sprightly; enliven.
carbonate
noun
- a salt or ester of carbonic acid. Carbonate salts contain the divalent ion CO 3 2–
verb
- to form or turn into a carbonate
- tr to treat with carbon dioxide or carbonic acid, as in the manufacture of soft drinks
carbonate
/ kär′bə-nāt′ /
Noun
- A salt or ester of carbonic acid, containing the group CO 3 . The reaction of carbonic acid with a metal results in a salt (such as sodium carbonate), and the reaction of carbonic acid with an organic compound results in an ester (such as diethyl carbonate).
- Any other compound containing the group CO 3 . Carbonates include minerals such as calcite and aragonite.
- Sediment or a sedimentary rock formed by the precipitation of organic or inorganic carbon from an aqueous solution of carbonates of calcium, magnesium, or iron. Limestone is a carbonate rock.
Verb
- To add carbon dioxide to a substance, such as a beverage.
Other Words From
- carbon·ator noun
- non·carbo·nate noun
- non·carbo·nated adjective
- semi·carbon·ate adjective
- un·carbon·ated adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of carbonate1
Word History and Origins
Origin of carbonate1
Example Sentences
When the carbon meets other elements found in the basalt, a reaction kicks off and it solidifies, locking it away as carbonate minerals.
“Some of these are carbonate minerals. They contain the mineralised CO2.”
Chinese companies refine the spodumene into solid lithium, and into the two lithium compounds used in batteries - lithium hydroxide and lithium carbonate.
When the carbon meets other elements found in the basalt, a reaction kicks off and it solidifies, locking it away as carbonate minerals.
“Some of these are carbonate minerals. They contain the mineralised CO2.”
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