2. Verb. (third-person singular of fulminate) ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Fulminates
1. fulminate [v] - See also: fulminate
Lexicographical Neighbors of Fulminates
Literary usage of Fulminates
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Elements of Chemistry: Theoretical and Practical by William Allen Miller (1880)
"An argument of far greater weight, however, is derived from the consideration of
the circumstance that the fulminates are produced bv the action of ..."
2. Lectures on Explosives: A Course of Lectures Prepared Especially as a Manual by Willoughby Walke (1897)
"fulminates, AMIDES, AND SIMILAR COMPOUNDS. Chemical Constitution of the
fulminates.—The fulminates are now regarded as metallic salts of a hypothetical ..."
3. Lectures on Explosives: A Course of Lectures Prepared Especially as a Manual by Willoughby Walke (1897)
"fulminates, AMIDES, AND SIMILAR COMPOUNDS. . • Chemical Constitution of the
fulminates.—The fulminates are now regarded as metallic salts of a hypothetical ..."
4. The Annals of Philosophy by Richard Phillips, E W Brayley (1824)
"In addition to this, if we compare the fulminates with the neutral tartrates,
and the various fulminic acids to the several ..."
5. A System of Chemistry of Inorganic Bodies by Thomas Thomson (1831)
"OF fulminates. The first knowledge of the fulminates was the consequence of the
well known experiments of Howard, who made known the fulminates of mercury ..."
6. First Principles of Chemistry: For the Use of Colleges and Schools by Benjamin Silliman (1850)
"fulminates. 892. The mutual action of nitric acid, alcohol, and nitrate of silver
or mercury, gives rise to salts which are distinguished by exploding ..."
7. Outlines of Industrial Chemistry: A Text-book for Students by Frank Hall Thorp, Charles D. Demond (1905)
"... called fulminates, are exceedingly dangerous, being very easily exploded by
shocks or blows. The silver and mercury fulminates are ..."
8. Handbook of Organic Chemistry: For the Use of Students by William Gregory, J. Milton Sanders (1857)
"No neutral fulminates exist with ( AS u> 2 eq. of a difficultly reducible oxide,
such as potash, soda, baryta, ( "KO To prepare the fulminate of mercury, ..."