bismuthal |
bismuthyl |
As an adjective bismuthal
is containing bismuth.
As a noun bismuthyl is
(chemistry) any tartrate in the form of a univalent radical, wherein only one replaceable hydrogen atom has been replaced by a base, causing it to have twice the amount of acid contained in a normal salt.
taxonomy |
bismuthyl |
As nouns the difference between taxonomy and bismuthyl
is that
taxonomy is the science or the technique used to make a classification while
bismuthyl is any tartrate in the form of a univalent radical, wherein only one replaceable hydrogen atom has been replaced by a base, causing it to have twice the amount of acid contained in a normal salt.
salt |
bismuthyl |
As an initialism salt
is (politics) strategic]] arms limitation [[talks|talks.
As a noun bismuthyl is
(chemistry) any tartrate in the form of a univalent radical, wherein only one replaceable hydrogen atom has been replaced by a base, causing it to have twice the amount of acid contained in a normal salt.
acid |
bismuthyl |
As nouns the difference between acid and bismuthyl
is that
acid is acid (
a food with a sharp taste) while
bismuthyl is (chemistry) any tartrate in the form of a univalent radical, wherein only one replaceable hydrogen atom has been replaced by a base, causing it to have twice the amount of acid contained in a normal salt.
As an adjective acid
is acid; sour; tart (
having a sharp taste such as that of vinegar or a lemon).
base |
bismuthyl |
As an acronym base
is
b'''uilding'', '''''a'''ntenna-tower'', '''''s'''pan'', '''''e arth .
As a noun bismuthyl is
(chemistry) any tartrate in the form of a univalent radical, wherein only one replaceable hydrogen atom has been replaced by a base, causing it to have twice the amount of acid contained in a normal salt.
atom |
bismuthyl |
As nouns the difference between atom and bismuthyl
is that
atom is an (
l) while
bismuthyl is (chemistry) any tartrate in the form of a univalent radical, wherein only one replaceable hydrogen atom has been replaced by a base, causing it to have twice the amount of acid contained in a normal salt.
hydrogen |
bismuthyl |
As nouns the difference between hydrogen and bismuthyl
is that
hydrogen is the lightest chemical element (
symbol H) with an atomic number of 1 and atomic weight of 1.00794 while
bismuthyl is any tartrate in the form of a univalent radical, wherein only one replaceable hydrogen atom has been replaced by a base, causing it to have twice the amount of acid contained in a normal salt.
radical |
bismuthyl |
In chemistry|lang=en terms the difference between radical and bismuthyl
is that
radical is (chemistry) a group of atoms, joined by covalent bonds, that take part in reactions as a single unit while
bismuthyl is (chemistry) any tartrate in the form of a univalent radical, wherein only one replaceable hydrogen atom has been replaced by a base, causing it to have twice the amount of acid contained in a normal salt.
As nouns the difference between radical and bismuthyl
is that
radical is a member of the most progressive wing of the liberal party; someone favouring social reform (but generally stopping short of socialism) while
bismuthyl is (chemistry) any tartrate in the form of a univalent radical, wherein only one replaceable hydrogen atom has been replaced by a base, causing it to have twice the amount of acid contained in a normal salt.
As an adjective radical
is favoring fundamental change, or change at the root cause of a matter.
univalent |
bismuthyl |
In chemistry terms the difference between univalent and bismuthyl
is that
univalent is having a valence of 1, or having only one valence while
bismuthyl is any tartrate in the form of a univalent radical, wherein only one replaceable hydrogen atom has been replaced by a base, causing it to have twice the amount of acid contained in a normal salt.
As an adjective univalent
is having a valence of 1, or having only one valence.
tartrate |
bismuthyl |
In chemistry terms the difference between tartrate and bismuthyl
is that
tartrate is any salt or ester of tartaric acid while
bismuthyl is any tartrate in the form of a univalent radical, wherein only one replaceable hydrogen atom has been replaced by a base, causing it to have twice the amount of acid contained in a normal salt.
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