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Definition of Crystallizing
1. Noun. The formation of crystals.
Generic synonyms: Chemical Phenomenon
Specialized synonyms: Bloom, Efflorescence
Derivative terms: Crystallise, Crystallize, Crystallize, Crystallize, Crystallize
Definition of Crystallizing
1. Verb. (present participle of crystallize) ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Crystallizing
1. crystallize [v] - See also: crystallize
Lexicographical Neighbors of Crystallizing
Literary usage of Crystallizing
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Sorghum and Its Products: An Account of Recent Investigations Concerning the by F. L. Stewart (1867)
"AT the close of the day's boiling, transfer the cooler to the crystallizing-room.
Here two modes of treatment are to be pursued to suit the kind of product ..."
2. The Annual Register, Or, A View of the History, Politics, and Literature for by Edmund Burke (1829)
"Method of making a cheap Soda Ley, without crystallizing, for the Ute of the
Turkey-red Dyer». By Air. C. Cameron.—Into a cast-iron boiler capable of ..."
3. A Theoretical and Practical Treatise on the Manufacture of Sulphuric Acid by Georg Lunge (1880)
"The crystallizing-cones for the finished salt must be placed in a very clean
special shed; its bottom, made of asphalt, stone flags, or some other tight ..."
4. The Metallography and Heat Treatment of Iron and Steel by Albert Sauveur (1918)
"crystallizing Properties of Electrolytic Iron. — Stead and Carpenter have made
... crystallizing properties radically different from those of other irons. ..."
5. A Text Book of Chemical Engineering by Edward Hart (1920)
"Whatever the cause may be the control of crystallization and its rapid completion
so as to avoid the building of expensive crystallizing pans is greatly to ..."
6. The Reformation by George Park Fisher (1906)
"The ferment that attended the rise of Protestantism must eventually lead to a
crystallizing of parties; and this must raise up a barrier in the way of the ..."
7. The Reformation by Williston Walker (1873)
"The ferment that attended the rise of Protestantism must eventually lead to a
crystallizing of parties ; and this must raise up a barrier in the way of the ..."