Definition of Dyestuffs

1. Noun. (plural of dyestuff) ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Dyestuffs

1. dyestuff [n] - See also: dyestuff

Lexicographical Neighbors of Dyestuffs

dyer's-broom
dyer's greenweed
dyer's mignonette
dyer's rocket
dyer's weed
dyer's woad
dyer's woodruff
dyeries
dyers
dyers' chamomile
dyery
dyes
dyester
dyesters
dyestuff
dyestuffs (current term)
dyeth
dyeweed
dyeweeds
dyewood
dyewoods
dygogram
dygograms
dyin'
dying
dying(a)
dying(p)
dying declaration
dying on the vine
dyingly

Literary usage of Dyestuffs

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. A Dictionary of Applied Chemistry by Thomas Edward Thorpe (1912)
"In the case of a few dyestuffs which are more difficult to strip (eg basic ... Bleeding test for direct dyestuffs.—In testing for direct dyestuffs by the ..."

2. Allen's Commercial Organic Analysis: A Treatise on the Properties, Modes of by Alfred Henry Allen (1911)
"Oxidation of members of the Patent Blue Group with ferric chloride gives rise to dyestuffs known as Cyanines. Azo-green is a mordant dyestuff obtained by ..."

3. A Dictionary of Applied Chemistry by Thomas Edward Thorpe (1921)
"To distinguish between individual dyestuffs of the same group the same method should be ft is obvious that in many instances the analytical procedure may bo ..."

4. Industrial Chemistry: A Manual for the Student and Manufacturer by Allen Rogers, Alfred Bellamy Aubert (1912)
"Artificial Organic dyestuffs. The natural dyestuffs were depended upon almost wholly until the discovery of mauve by Perkin in 185(3. ..."

5. Outlines of Industrial Chemistry: A Text-book for Students by Frank Hall Thorp, Warren Kendall Lewis (1916)
"COLORING MATTERS According to their origin coloring matters may be classified broadly into three groups: (1) Natural Organic dyestuffs (Vegetable and ..."

6. The Chemistry of Colloids by Richard Zsigmondy, Ellwood Barker Spear, John Foote Norton (1917)
"CHAPTER XI dyestuffs SIMILAR to the soaps many dyestuffs are salts of more or less basic or acid properties, and possess a colloidal nature. ..."

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