¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Carburets
1. carburet [v] - See also: carburet
Lexicographical Neighbors of Carburets
Literary usage of Carburets
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Manufacture of Iron, in All Its Various Branches: Including a by Frederick Overman (1854)
"carburets of Iron. Iron has a great affinity for carbon, but science has yet done
... In the chemical laboratories, carburets of iron are generally made by ..."
2. A Treatise on Metallurgy: Comprising Mining, and General and Particular by Frederick Overman (1865)
"carburets.—Carbon has only a feeble affinity for metals, and cannot readily be
... The best means of forming carburets are the carbonates, and oxalates, ..."
3. Elements of Chemistry: Including the Recent Discoveries and Doctrines of the by Edward Turner (1835)
"carburets of Iron.—Carbon and iron unite in very various proportions; but there
are three compounds very distinct from each other—namely» graphite, ..."
4. The School of Mines Quarterly by Columbia University School of Chemistry (1886)
"THE ELECTRICAL AND MAGNETIC PROPERTIES OF THE IRON carburets.* DURING the past
six or seven years the authors of this paper have been engaged in an ..."
5. A Journal of Natural Philosophy, Chemistry and the Arts by William Nicholson (1805)
"... on Hydro- carburets in general, and the Carbonic Oxide : By Mr. WILLIAM HENRY.
... carburets ..."
6. Chemical Technology: Or, Chemistry, Applied to the Arts and to Manufactures by Friedrich Knapp, Edmund Ronalds, Thomas Richardson (1848)
"... or through the fire-bridge, in several small jets or streams, as readily to
mix with the mass of heated hydro-carburets in their escape from the fuel on ..."
7. A Treatise on Gas-works and the Practice of Manufacturing and Distributing by Samuel Hughes (1853)
"... are liquid carburets of hydrogen, the vapours of which enter into mixed gas.
These mostly consist of carbon and hydrogen combined in the atomic ..."