sorbite
English
Etymology 1
From Sorby (“a surname”) + -ite, after Henry Clifton Sorby.
Noun
sorbite (countable and uncountable, plural sorbites)
- (obsolete) Pearlite.
- 1905, Professional Papers of the Corps of Royal Engineers, volume 30, page 217:
- According to Boynton this constituent is sorbite in the case of steels containing more than ·8 per cent. carbon, for if troostite be β iron free from carbon it cannot exist in hyper-eutectoid steels.
- 1962, The Journal of the Iron and Steel Institute, volume 200, page 940:
- After a very long period of annealing their morphology is very similar to the carbides precipitated in the sorbite and, as regards the amount of precipitate, the ferritic grains are almost indiscernible from the sorbitic (Fig.3).
- 1962, J. W. Mellor, A Comprehensive Treatise on Inorganic and Theoretical Chemistry, volume 12, page 847:
- Some consider granular pearlite or granular cementite to be sorbite. Hence it is also called sorbitic pearlite, and when referring to the contained carbon, sorbitic carbide.
Noun
sorbite (countable and uncountable, plural sorbites)
- (obsolete) Sorbitol.
- 1881, “Abstracts of Chemical Papers: Sorbin and Sorbite”, in Journal of the Chemical Society, volume 11, page 148:
- Sorbite is isomeric with mannite and dulcite, and forms with oxalic acid at 75° sorbite-formamide, with evolution of carbonic anhydride. It is a colourless odourless syrup.
Esperanto
Italian
Verb
sorbite
- inflection of sorbire:
- second-person plural present indicative
- second-person plural imperative
Anagrams
Latin
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