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Definition of Talcose
1. a. Of or pertaining to talc; composed of, or resembling, talc.
Definition of Talcose
1. Adjective. talc (attributive) ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Talcose
1. talc [adj] - See also: talc
Lexicographical Neighbors of Talcose
Literary usage of Talcose
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Report on the Geology, Mineralogy, Botany, and Zoology of Massachusetts by Massachusetts Geological Survey, Edward Hitchcock (1835)
"To what circumstance the great abundance of magnesia in the talcose slate is ...
But its presence being once admitted, it is easy to conceive how talcose, ..."
2. Report on the Geology, Mineralogy, Botany, and Zoology of Massachusetts by Massachusetts Geological Survey, Edward Hitchcock (1835)
"To what circumstance the great abundance of magnesia in the talcose slate is ...
But its presence being once admitted, it is easy to conceive how talcose, ..."
3. Geological Report of the Midland Counties of North Carolina by North Carolina State Geologist (1856)
"talcose Slates.—The composition of these slates does not differ materially from
those which ... The talcose slates may be regarded as the bottom rocks, ..."
4. Geological Report of the Midland Counties of North Carolina by North Carolina State Geologist (1856)
"The lower series will contain the talcose slates, white and brown sandstone ...
The talcose slates may be regarded as the bottom rocks* the oldest sediments ..."
5. The Corrosion and Preservation of Iron and Steel by Allerton Seward Cushman, Henry Alfred Gardner (1910)
"The talcose variety is very tabular in form, and is also somewhat largely used
in the manufacture of mixed paints. Both varieties are transparent in oil, ..."
6. A Practical Treatise on Metallurgy: Adapted from the Last German Edition of by Bruno Kerl, William Crookes, Ernst Otto Röhrig (1870)
"talcose Rocks, such as talc slate, chlorite slate, serpentine, and soapstone;
... The talcose or talc slate is laminar or scaly talc, frequently mixed with ..."
7. A Practical Treatise on Metallurgy: Adapted from the Last German Edition of by Bruno Kerl, William Crookes, Ernst Otto Röhrig (1870)
"talcose Rocks, such as talc slate, chlorite slate, serpentine, and soapstone;
... The talcose or talc slate is laminar or scaly talc, frequently mixed with ..."
8. Report on the Geology, Mineralogy, Botany, and Zoology of Massachusetts by Massachusetts Geological Survey, Edward Hitchcock (1835)
"To what circumstance the great abundance of magnesia in the talcose slate is ...
But its presence being once admitted, it is easy to conceive how talcose, ..."
9. Report on the Geology, Mineralogy, Botany, and Zoology of Massachusetts by Massachusetts Geological Survey, Edward Hitchcock (1835)
"To what circumstance the great abundance of magnesia in the talcose slate is ...
But its presence being once admitted, it is easy to conceive how talcose, ..."
10. Geological Report of the Midland Counties of North Carolina by North Carolina State Geologist (1856)
"talcose Slates.—The composition of these slates does not differ materially from
those which ... The talcose slates may be regarded as the bottom rocks, ..."
11. Geological Report of the Midland Counties of North Carolina by North Carolina State Geologist (1856)
"The lower series will contain the talcose slates, white and brown sandstone ...
The talcose slates may be regarded as the bottom rocks* the oldest sediments ..."
12. The Corrosion and Preservation of Iron and Steel by Allerton Seward Cushman, Henry Alfred Gardner (1910)
"The talcose variety is very tabular in form, and is also somewhat largely used
in the manufacture of mixed paints. Both varieties are transparent in oil, ..."
13. A Practical Treatise on Metallurgy: Adapted from the Last German Edition of by Bruno Kerl, William Crookes, Ernst Otto Röhrig (1870)
"talcose Rocks, such as talc slate, chlorite slate, serpentine, and soapstone;
... The talcose or talc slate is laminar or scaly talc, frequently mixed with ..."
14. A Practical Treatise on Metallurgy: Adapted from the Last German Edition of by Bruno Kerl, William Crookes, Ernst Otto Röhrig (1870)
"talcose Rocks, such as talc slate, chlorite slate, serpentine, and soapstone;
... The talcose or talc slate is laminar or scaly talc, frequently mixed with ..."