Definition of Anatase

1. Noun. a blue or brown mineral, a form of titanium dioxide, used as a pigment ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Definition of Anatase

1. a mineral [n -S]

Lexicographical Neighbors of Anatase

anastomotic
anastomotic branch
anastomotic branch of middle meningeal artery to lacrimal artery
anastomotic stricture
anastomotic ulcer
anastomotic vein
anastomotic veins
anastral
anastrophe
anastrophes
anastrophic
anastrozole
anastylosis
anasyrmata
anatase (current term)
anatases
anatectic
anatexis
anathema
anathemas
anathemata
anathematic
anathematisation
anathematise
anathematised
anathematiser
anathematisers
anathematises
anathematising

Literary usage of Anatase

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

1. Petrographic Methods: The Authorized English Translation of Part I by Ernst Weinschenk, Robert Watson Clark (1912)
"anatase (4) anatase as a rock constituent is frequently developed tabular, while sharp pyramidal forms are less common. Some typical cross sections are ..."

2. Records of General Science by Robert Dundas Thomson, T Thomson (1835)
"Its external characters correspond with those of anatase, as mentioned by Phillips in ... If it be anatase, it is well worth while to notice it as a new and ..."

3. Mineralogy: An Introduction to the Scientific Study of Minerals by Sir Henry A Miers, Henry A[lexander] Miers (1902)
"anatase with Quartz, from ... Fig. 489.—anatase, r {117}, i {116}, 5 {113},.p {111}, e {101}. anatase ..."

4. The Encyclopedia Americana: A Library of Universal Knowledge (1918)
"Anastomoses are found in the arteries, veins and lymphatics. Anastomoses of nerve and muscle fibres are also spoken of. anatase, a mineral more correctly ..."

5. Rock Minerals: Their Chemical and Physical Characters and Their by Joseph Paxson Iddings (1911)
"Brookite, anatase, and rutile may be formed by the same process, but at different temperatures, brookite requiring a lower temperature than rutile. ..."

6. Rock Minerals, Their Chemical and Physical Characters and Their by Joseph Paxson Iddings (1906)
"Brookite, anatase, and rutile may be formed by the same process, but at different temperatures, brookite requiring a lower temperature than rutile. ..."

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