calamine

See also: calaminé

English

Etymology

From French calamine, from Medieval Latin calamīna, from Latin cadmī̆a, from Ancient Greek κᾰδμείᾱ (kadmeíā), after Κάδμος (Kádmos, Cadmus), mythological founder of Thebes, of Pre-Greek origin.

Noun

calamine (usually uncountable, plural calamines)

  1. A pale pink powdered form of zinc oxide used in skin lotions.
  2. (mineralogy) The zinc silicate mineral hemimorphite.

Verb

calamine (third-person singular simple present calamines, present participle calamining, simple past and past participle calamined)

  1. (transitive) To coat or treat with calamine.

Anagrams


French

Noun

calamine f (plural calamines)

  1. calamine (zinc oxide or silicate)
  2. Residue of carbon deposited in the cylinders of two-stroke engines

Further reading


Italian

Noun

calamine f

  1. plural of calamina
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.