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Greeks green

Name from prdsinos didymos (Greek = green twin), because it is closely related to neodymium and forms green salts... [Pg.142]

Name from thallos (Greek = green twig or shoot) gives flames an intense green color... [Pg.152]

Since, in the opinion of the present authors and contrary to the observations of the ancient Greeks, green coriander leaves and seeds have a very aesthetic aroma, the odor profiles of both living and dead leaves and seeds were conpared. The data for coriander leaf volatiles are shown in Table VIII. [Pg.185]

Praseodymium Prasios didymos Greek Green twin... [Pg.74]

Boltz (1549) refers to this as synonymous with Greek green Griechisch grien ). However, he mentions honey in the recipe and recent work by Banik (1989) indicates that this is likely to produce a different form of verdigris (q.v.). [Pg.350]

The detailed mechanism of this transformation is complicated and takes many steps, the first of which is the absorption of one quantum of light by the extended tt system (Section 14-11) of chlorophyll chloros, Greek, green, and phillon, Greek, leaf). [Pg.1094]

Great Salt Lake Greek fire Green acids Green beer... [Pg.454]

Figure S.14 The eight P strands in one domain of the crystallin structure in this idealized diagram are drawn along the surface of a barrel. From this diagram it is obvious that the p strands are arranged in two Greek key motifs, one (red) formed by strands 1-4 and the other (green) by strands 5-8. Notice that the p strands that form one motif contribute to both P sheets as shown in Figure 5.12. Figure S.14 The eight P strands in one domain of the crystallin structure in this idealized diagram are drawn along the surface of a barrel. From this diagram it is obvious that the p strands are arranged in two Greek key motifs, one (red) formed by strands 1-4 and the other (green) by strands 5-8. Notice that the p strands that form one motif contribute to both P sheets as shown in Figure 5.12.
Folic acid is a member of the vitamin B complex found in green plants, fresh fruit, yeast, and liver. Folic acid takes its name from folium, Latin for leaf. Pterin compounds are named from the Greek word for wing because these substances were first identified in insect wings. Two pterins are familiar to any child who has seen (and chased) the common yellow sulfur butterfly and its white counterpart, the cabbage butterfly. Xanthopterin and leu-... [Pg.602]

C. A. Lamy in the preceding year 1861/2 and named after the characteristic bright green line in its fiame spectrum (Greek Qakkog, thallos, a budding shoot or twig). [Pg.217]

Praseodymium, Pr C. A. von Welsbach 1885 Greek rrpaoio -l-SiSup.o praseos -I- didymos, leek green -1- twin... [Pg.1229]

Name from chloros (Greek = pale green)... [Pg.127]

The photosynthetic apparatus in green plants and algae is located in the chloroplast, which is a flattened, double-membraned structure about 150-200 A thick/4,5 The two flat membranes lie one above the other and are united at their peripheries. These double-membraned structures have been termed thylakoids (from the Greek sacklike )/ Each membrane of the thylakoid consists of a water-insoluble lipoprotein complex which contains the light-absorbing chlorophyll and other pigments utilized in photosynthesis. [Pg.282]

Praseodymium (Pr, [Xe]4/36s2), name and symbol after the Greek words ixpomoq + <"ip-Os (prasios + didymos, green twin). Discovered (1885) by Carl... [Pg.360]

Chlorine - the atomic number is 17 and the chemical symbol is Cl. The name derives from the Greek chlooros for pale green or greenish yellow color of the element. It was discovered by the Swedish pharmacist and chemist Carl-Wilhelm Scheele in 1774. In 1810, the English chemist Humphry Davy proved it was an element and gave it the name chlorine. [Pg.7]

Praseodymium - the atomic number is 59 and the chemical symbol is Pr. The name was originally praseodidymium and was later shortened to praseodymium, which is derived from the Greek prasios for green and didymos for twin because of the pale green salts it forms. It was discovered by the Austrian chemist Carl Auer von Welsbach in 1885, who separated it and the element neodymium from a didymium sample. Didymium had previously been thought to be a separate element. [Pg.16]


See other pages where Greeks green is mentioned: [Pg.22]    [Pg.22]    [Pg.376]    [Pg.388]    [Pg.104]    [Pg.108]    [Pg.125]    [Pg.793]    [Pg.701]    [Pg.1139]    [Pg.794]    [Pg.926]    [Pg.932]    [Pg.934]    [Pg.1473]    [Pg.1139]    [Pg.338]    [Pg.6]    [Pg.114]    [Pg.57]    [Pg.77]    [Pg.577]    [Pg.608]    [Pg.2]    [Pg.6]    [Pg.376]    [Pg.388]    [Pg.482]    [Pg.21]    [Pg.24]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.18 , Pg.131 , Pg.195 , Pg.204 , Pg.244 , Pg.245 , Pg.246 , Pg.248 , Pg.249 , Pg.250 , Pg.254 , Pg.258 , Pg.312 ]




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