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1 compound
См. также в других словарях:
chemical conglomerate — chemical plant, factory which produces various chemical products … English contemporary dictionary
Chemical Automatics Design Bureau — (CADB), also KB Khimavtomatika (Russian: Конструкторское бюро химавтоматики, КБХА, KBKhA) is a Russian Design Bureau founded by the NKAP (People’s Commissariat of the Aircraft Industry) in 1941 and led by Semyon Kosberg until his death in 1965.… … Wikipedia
chemical plant — factory which produces or refines chemical products … English contemporary dictionary
chemical industry — Introduction complex of processes, operations, and organizations engaged in the manufacture of chemicals and their derivatives. Although the chemical industry may be described simply as the industry that uses chemistry and… … Universalium
CHEMICAL CRAFTS AND INDUSTRIES — During the Middle Ages a number of crafts involving the use of chemical processes and a certain chemical knowledge were practiced by Jews. Jews sometimes dabbled in alchemy , which frequently led to results of importance to chemistry; the… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
Chemical Coast — [v · d · … Wikipedia
Chemical Corps — Seal of the Chemical Corps The Chemical Corps is the branch of the United States Army tasked with defending against Chemical, Biological, Radiological, and Nuclear (CBRN) weapons. The corps was founded as the Chemical Warfare Service during World … Wikipedia
Chemical leasing — In the chemical industry, chemical leasing is a business model in which the chemical company supplies a substance for a specific service, but retains ownership of the chemical. It is intended to shift the focus from increasing sales volume of… … Wikipedia
Factory farming — A commercial chicken house raising broiler pullets for meat … Wikipedia
chemical — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun ADJECTIVE ▪ organic ▪ inorganic, synthetic ▪ dangerous, harmful, hazardous, poisonous, toxic … Collocations dictionary
Chemical mortar battalion — The United States chemical mortar battalions were army units attached to U.S. Infantry divisions, and it was their responsibility to service the 4.2 in (107 mm) chemical mortar during World War II. For this reason they were also called the Four… … Wikipedia