different between aromatic vs corannulene

aromatic

English

Alternative forms

  • aromatick (obsolete)
  • aromatique (obsolete)

Etymology

Late Middle English, from Middle French and Old French aromatique, from Late Latin aromaticus, from Ancient Greek ????? (ár?ma, seasoning, spicy and/or fragrant smell).

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /æ.???mæt.?k/
  • Rhymes: -æt?k

Adjective

aromatic (comparative more aromatic, superlative most aromatic)

  1. Fragrant or spicy.
  2. (organic chemistry) Having a closed ring of alternate single and double bonds with delocalized electrons.
  3. (organic chemistry) Derived from benzene.

Usage notes

  • Not to be confused with aromantic.

Antonyms

  • (organic chemistry): aliphatic

Derived terms

Translations

Noun

aromatic (plural aromatics)

  1. A fragrant plant or spice added to a dish to flavour it.
  2. (organic chemistry) Any aromatic compound.

Translations

Anagrams

  • macrotia

Romanian

Etymology

From French aromatique, from Latin aromaticus.

Adjective

aromatic m or n (feminine singular aromatic?, masculine plural aromatici, feminine and neuter plural aromatice)

  1. aromatic

Declension

Related terms

  • arom?

aromatic From the web:

  • what aromantic
  • what aromatic mean
  • what aromatics to put in turkey cavity
  • what aromantic means
  • what aromatic compounds
  • what aromatic hydrocarbons
  • what makes it aromatic


corannulene

English

Noun

corannulene (plural corannulenes)

  1. (organic chemistry) Any of a group of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (circulenes) containing at least one ring of five fused benzene rings and thus having a non-planar form reminiscent of a bowl that is a fragment of buckminsterfullerene; a buckybowl.
  2. (organic chemistry) The parent compound of this group

corannulene From the web:

+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share

you may also like