carbone
EnglishEdit
PronunciationEdit
NounEdit
carbone
- Obsolete form of carbon.
- 1819, Bartholomew Parr, The London Medical Dictionary (volume 2, page 279)
- The colour we now know to be owing to the influence of the oxygenous gas, and the darker colour of venal blood to carbone.
- 1819, Bartholomew Parr, The London Medical Dictionary (volume 2, page 279)
VerbEdit
carbone (third-person singular simple present carbones, present participle carboning, simple past and past participle carboned)
- (obsolete, transitive) To broil.
- 1661 January 11 (date written; Gregorian calendar), Samuel Pepys; Mynors Bright, transcriber, “January 1st, 1660–1661”, in Henry B[enjamin] Wheatley, editor, The Diary of Samuel Pepys […], volume I, London: George Bell & Sons […]; Cambridge: Deighton Bell & Co., published 1893, OCLC 1016700617:
- We had a calf's head carboned.
Related termsEdit
Part or all of this entry has been imported from the 1913 edition of Webster’s Dictionary, which is now free of copyright and hence in the public domain. The imported definitions may be significantly out of date, and any more recent senses may be completely missing.
(See the entry for carbone in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913)
AnagramsEdit
FrenchEdit
EtymologyEdit
Learned borrowing from Latin carbō, carbōnem, coined by Antoine Lavoisier in 1789. Doublet of charbon.
PronunciationEdit
NounEdit
carbone m (uncountable)
Derived termsEdit
- bas-carbone
- bilan carbone
- carboner
- carbonifère
- carbonique
- carboniser
- carboxylique
- copie carbone
- cycle du carbone
- dioxyde de carbone
- empreinte carbone
- fibre de carbone
- marché du carbone
- monoxide de carbone
- monoxyde de carbone
- neutralité carbone
- oxyde de carbone
- papier carbone
- radiocarbone
- taxe carbone
DescendantsEdit
- → Arabic: كَرْبُون (karbūn)
- → Dutch: carbon
- → English: carbon
- → Ottoman Turkish: قاربون (karbon)
- Turkish: karbon
- → Romanian: carbon
- → Spanish: carbono
- → Tagalog: karbono
- → Vietnamese: cacbon
Further readingEdit
- “carbone”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.
ItalianEdit
EtymologyEdit
From Latin carbōnem (“charcoal; coal”), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *ker (“to burn”).
PronunciationEdit
NounEdit
carbone m (plural carboni)
Related termsEdit
AnagramsEdit
LatinEdit
PronunciationEdit
NounEdit
carbōne
SpanishEdit
PronunciationEdit
VerbEdit
carbone
- inflection of carbonar:
WalloonEdit
NounEdit
carbone m
- carbon (chemical element)