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1 koagulirati (se)
vi (vr) pf/impf chem, techn & med coagulate, become coagulated, undergo coagulation -
2 ἐπισκιρρόομαι
Greek-English dictionary (Αγγλικά Ελληνικά-λεξικό) > ἐπισκιρρόομαι
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3 coagularsi
pron [gen, CHIM]to coagulate, to become coagulated -
4 πωρόω
2 unite fractured bones by a callus, Id.Fract.47 ([voice] Pass.), Dsc.1.70,84:—[voice] Pass., become hard, Arist.Aud. 802b8, Thphr.HP4.15.2; become thickened, coagulated, Hp.Steril. 222.III in [voice] Pass., become insensible, of the flesh, : metaph., become insensible, obtuse, or blind, of the heart, Ev.Marc.6.52, 8.17, Ep.Rom.11.7; . -
5 आश्यै _āśyai
आश्यै 1 Ā. To become congealed or coagulated, to become dry; यावन्नाश्यायते वेदिः R.17.37. -
6 raggrumare
raggrumare v.tr. raggrumarsi v. intr.pron. to clot; to coagulate, to curdle: per terra c'erano tracce di sangue raggrumato, there were traces of coagulated blood on the ground.* * *[raggru'mare] 1.verbo transitivo to congeal, to thicken2.verbo pronominale raggrumarsi [ sangue] to clot, to coagulate, to congeal; [ salsa] to become* lumpy* * *raggrumare/raggru'mare/ [1]to congeal, to thickenII raggrumarsi verbo pronominale -
7 cuajar
m.maw, abomasum, abomasus, fourth stomach.El cuajar de la vaca era muy grande The cow's maw was huge.v.1 to curdle (solidificar) (leche).El queso cuajó rápidamente The cheese curdled quickly.2 to be settled (lograrse) (acuerdo).3 to settle (nieve).4 to fit in (ser aceptado) (person).5 to coagulate, to clot, to set.La sangre de res cuajó en la olla The beef blood coagulated in the pot.6 to take on, to become popular.Esa moda cuajó That trend took on.* * *2 (huevo) to set3 figurado (recargar de adornos) to fill with, cover1 (nieve) to lie2 figurado (tener éxito) to be a success, come off2 (huevo) to set3 figurado (llenarse) to fill up* * *1. VT1) [+ leche] to curdle; [+ gelatina] to set; [+ sangre] to coagulate, clot; [+ grasa] to congeal2)cuajar algo de — (=cubrir) to cover sth with, adorn sth with; (=llenar) to fill sth with
2. VI1) [nieve] to lie; [leche] to curdle2) [moda, producto] to catch on, take off; [plan] to take shape; [idea, propuesta] to be well received, be acceptable; [truco] to come off, workel acuerdo no cuajó — the agreement didn't come off o work out
3) Méx (=charlar) to chat3.See:* * *1.verbo intransitivo1)a) leche to curdle; flan/yogur to setb) nieve to settle2)a) ideología to be accepted; reforma to come about; argumento/historia to come together; plan/proyecto to come off; moda to catch on, take offb) persona to fit in2.cuajar vta) < leche> to curdleb) ( llenar)3.cuajarse v pron to curdle* * *= congeal, come together, clot, fall into + place.Ex. Culturally heterogeneous societies, by definition, do not cohere by or congeal around a common value system.Ex. As for timing, a number of things are in process, and there is some hope that by next spring they might come together.Ex. Blood that flows outside of a blood vessel will clot and form a scab.Ex. It's really falling into place for us, but we have to keep doing it, week in and week out.----* nata cuajada = clotted cream.* sin cuajar = runny [runnier -comp., runniest -sup.].* * *1.verbo intransitivo1)a) leche to curdle; flan/yogur to setb) nieve to settle2)a) ideología to be accepted; reforma to come about; argumento/historia to come together; plan/proyecto to come off; moda to catch on, take offb) persona to fit in2.cuajar vta) < leche> to curdleb) ( llenar)3.cuajarse v pron to curdle* * *= congeal, come together, clot, fall into + place.Ex: Culturally heterogeneous societies, by definition, do not cohere by or congeal around a common value system.
Ex: As for timing, a number of things are in process, and there is some hope that by next spring they might come together.Ex: Blood that flows outside of a blood vessel will clot and form a scab.Ex: It's really falling into place for us, but we have to keep doing it, week in and week out.* nata cuajada = clotted cream.* sin cuajar = runny [runnier -comp., runniest -sup.].* * *abomasum, fourth stomachviA1 «leche» to curdle; «flan/yogur» to set; «sangre» to clot, coagulate2 «nieve» to settleB1(afianzarse): el ecologismo ha cuajado como una alternativa seria ecology has come to be accepted as a serious alternativesi cuajan las reformas previstas if the proposed reforms come about o come into beingeste cuento no termina de cuajar this story never really comes togetherel proyecto no cuajó the plan did not come to anything o come offuna moda que no cuajó en este país a fashion which didn't really catch on o take off in this countryno intentes convencerme, que no cuaja ( fam); don't try and convince me, it won't work o ( colloq) it won't wash2 «persona» to fit inno cuaja en ese grupo she doesn't fit in with that group■ cuajarvt1 ‹leche› to curdle2 (llenar) cuajar algo DE algo to fill sth WITH sthcuajó el artículo de citas he filled o peppered the article with quotations■ cuajarseto curdle* * *
cuajar ( conjugate cuajar) verbo intransitivo
1
[flan/yogur] to set
2
[plan/proyecto] to come off;
[ moda] to catch on, take off
verbo transitivo ‹ leche› to curdle
cuajar
I verbo transitivo (leche) to curdle
II verbo intransitivo
1 (nieve) to lie
2 (moda) to catch on
3 (plan, esfuerzo) to get off the ground
' cuajar' also found in these entries:
English:
clot
- gel
- settle
- take off
- set
* * *cuajar1 nmZool fourth stomach, Espec abomasum♦ vt1. [solidificar] [leche] to curdle;[sangre] to clot, to coagulate2.[cubrir] to cover withcuajar de [llenar] to fill with;♦ vi1. [lograrse] [acuerdo] to be settled;[negocio] to take off, to get going;era un jugador que prometía pero no llegó a cuajar he was a player with promise but he never really achieved his potential2. [ser aceptado] [persona] to fit in;[moda] to catch on;las propuestas no cuajaron the proposals never came to anything;un estilo arquitectónico que no cuajó en Inglaterra an architectural style that didn't catch on in England3. [nieve] to settle* * *I v/i2 fam ( llenar) coverII v/t leche curdle* * *cuajar vi1) : to curdle2) coagular: to clot, to coagulate3) : to set, to jell4) : to be acceptedsu idea no cuajó: his idea didn't catch oncuajar vt1) : to curdle2) : to adorn* * *cuajar vb1. (nieve) to settle -
8 विमूर्त _vimūrta
विमूर्त a. Coagulated, become solid. -
9 पयस्य
payasya1) mfn. made of milk (as butter, cheese etc.). Lāṭy. ;
m. a cat L. ;
N. of a son of Aṇgiráṡ MBh. ;
(ā) f. coagulated milk, curds (made by mixing sour with hot sweet milk) TS. Br. ṠrS. ;
N. of sev. plants (Gynandropsis Pentaphylla = kākolī, kuṭumbinī, dugdhikā etc.) L. ;
2) Nom. P. - syati, to flow, become liquid, gaṇa kaṇḍv-ādi);
Ā. - syate = next Pāṇ. 3-1, 11 Vārtt. 1 Pat.
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10 विमूर्छित
vi-mūrchitamfn. ( murch) thickened, coagulated, become solid Yājñ. Vāgbh. ;
(ifc.) full of, mixed with, Bh. Car. ;
resounding with BhP. ;
n. « becoming stiff», fainting, a swoon Divyâ̱v.
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11 विमूर्त
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12 श्यान
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13 स्त्यान
styānamfn. grown dense, coagulated Suṡr. Sāh. ;
stiffened, become rigid Car. ;
soft, bland, unctuous, smooth (= snigdha) L. ;
thick, bulky, gross W. ;
sounding MW. ;
n. (only L.) density, thickness, grossness, massiveness;
unctuousness;
nectar;
idleness, sloth, apathy;
echo, sound
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14 Bevan, Edward John
[br]b. 11 December 1856 Birkenhead, Englandd. 17 October 1921 London, England[br]English co-inventor of the " viscose rayon " process for making artificial silk.[br]Bevan began his working life as a chemist in a soap works at Runcorn, but later studied chemistry at Owens College, Manchester. It was there that he met and formed a friendship with C.F. Cross, with whom he started to work on cellulose. Bevan moved to a paper mill in Scotland but then went south to London, where he and Cross set up a partnership in 1885 as consulting and analytical chemists. Their work was mainly concerned with the industrial utilization of cellulose, and with the problems of the paper and jute industries. Their joint publication, A Text-book of Paper-making, which first appeared in 1888 and went into several editions, became the standard reference and textbook on the subject. The book has a long introductory chapter on cellulose.In 1892 Cross, Bevan and Clayton Beadle discovered viscose, or sodium cellulose xanthate, and took out the patent which was to be the foundation of the "viscose rayon" industry. They had their own laboratory at Station Avenue, Kew Gardens, where they carried out much work that eventually resulted in viscose: cellulose, usually in the form of wood pulp, was treated first with caustic soda and then with carbon disulphide to form the xanthate, which was then dissolved in a solution of dilute caustic soda to produce a viscous liquid. After being aged, the viscose was extruded through fine holes in a spinneret and coagulated in a dilute acid to regenerate the cellulose as spinnable fibres. At first there was no suggestion of spinning it into fibre, but the hope was to use it for filaments in incandescent electric light bulbs. The sheen on the fibres suggested their possible use in textiles and the term "artificial silk" was later introduced. Cross and Bevan also discovered the acetate "Celanese", which was cellulose triacetate dissolved in acetone and spun in air, but both inventions needed much development before they could be produced commercially.In 1892 Bevan turned from cellulose to food and drugs and left the partnership to become Public Analyst to Middlesex County Council, a post he held until his death, although in 1895 he and Cross published their important work Cellulose. He was prominent in the affairs of the Society of Public Analysts and became one of its officials.[br]Bibliography1888, with C.F.Cross, A Text-book of Papermaking.1892, with C.F.Cross and C.Beadle, British patent no. 8,700 (viscose). 1895, with C.F.Cross, Cellulose.Further ReadingObituary, 1921, Journal of the Chemical Society.Obituary, 1921, Journal of the Society of Chemical Industry.Edwin J.Beer, 1962–3, "The birth of viscose rayon", Transactions of the Newcomen Society 35 (an account of the problems of developing viscose rayon; Beer worked under Cross in the Kew laboratories).RLH
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coagulate — I. adjective Date: 14th century archaic being clotted or congealed II. verb ( lated; lating) Etymology: Latin coagulatus, past participle of coagulare to curdle, from coagulum curdling agent, from cogere to drive together more at cogent Date … New Collegiate Dictionary
coagulate — 1. To convert a fluid or a substance in solution into a solid or gel. 2. To clot; to curdle; to change from a liquid to a solid or gel. [L. coagulo, pp. atus, to curdle] * * * co·ag·u·late kō ag yə .lāt vb, lat·ed; lat·ing … Medical dictionary
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