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Definition of Amidogen
1. n. A compound radical, NH2, not yet obtained in a separate state, which may be regarded as ammonia from the molecule of which one of its hydrogen atoms has been removed; -- called also the amido group, and in composition represented by the form amido.
Definition of Amidogen
1. Noun. (chemistry dated) A compound radical, NH2, not yet obtained in a separate state, which may be regarded as ammonia from the molecule of which one of the hydrogen atoms has been removed; called also the amido group. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Amidogen
1. a univalent chemical radical [n -S]
Medical Definition of Amidogen
1.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Amidogen
Literary usage of Amidogen
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Elements of chemistry, including the applications of the science in the arts by Thomas Graham (1842)
"amidogen. Eq. 202 or 16.9; N H2 or Ad; not isolable. Hydrogen and nitrogen do
not combine directly, but three compounds of these elements are generally ..."
2. Hand-book of Chemistry by Leopold Gmelin, Henry Watts (1866)
"amidogen-nucleus Stearamide. C^NH^O3 = C^AdH^O*. H. CARLET. Par. Soc. Butt.
(1859) 1, 76. Obtained in the same manner as ..."
3. Orr's Circle of the Sciences: A Series of Treatires on the Principles of by Richard Owen, Wm S Orr, John Radford Young, Alexander Jardine, Robert Gordon Latham, Edward Smith, William Sweetland Dallas (1855)
"The preceding is only one of several cases involving the production of amidogen,
and the formation of compounds termed amides. ' Ammonium. ..."
4. Chemical Recreations, a Popular Manual of Experimental Chemistry by John Joseph Griffin (1860)
"It is the hydride of amidogen. In the state of gas, its atomic measure is two
... We have here the whole materials of two salts, the hydride of amidogen, ..."
5. Handbook of Organic Chemistry: For the Use of Students by William Gregory, J. Milton Sanders (1857)
"Moreover, most, if not ¡ill, of those •which have been formed artificially, are
prepared with the ¡ii<l of ammonia, or some compound of ammonia, or amidogen ..."
6. An Introduction to Modern Therapeutics: Being the Croonian Lectures on the by Thomas Lauder Brunton (1892)
"Effect of Combination with amidogen upon Aromatic Bodies. Action of
Amido-compounds—Aniline. Aniline may be regarded either as amido-benzene, that is, ..."