different between belute vs elute
belute
English
Etymology
be- +? lute
Verb
belute (third-person singular simple present belutes, present participle beluting, simple past and past participle beluted)
- (transitive) To bespatter, as with mud.
belute From the web:
elute
English
Etymology
[1731] Borrowed from Latin ?l?tus, from the verb ?lu? (“I wash away”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /i.?lu?t/
- Hyphenation: e?lute
- Rhymes: -u?t
Verb
elute (third-person singular simple present elutes, present participle eluting, simple past and past participle eluted)
- (transitive) To separate one substance from another by means of a solvent; to wash; to cleanse.
- A mixture of isooctane and ethyl acetate can be used to elute triglycerides from a complex lipid solution.
Related terms
- eluent
- elutable
- elution
Translations
References
- Elute, Merriam-Webster's Online Dictionary, 2007.
elute From the web:
- what elutes first
- what elutes first in gas chromatography
- what elutes first in column chromatography
- what elutes first in size exclusion chromatography
- what elutes first in cation exchange
- what elutes first in anion exchange
- what elutes first in hplc
- what elutes first in gc
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- belute vs elute
- terms vs belute
- beaute vs belute
- belate vs belute
- benote vs behote
- benote vs denote
- annotate vs benote
- benote vs note
- defer vs belate
- velate vs belate
- belave vs belate
- belate vs behate
- belate vs blate
- belate vs belace
- belate vs berate
- elate vs belate
- remove vs rewove
- rewove vs rewoke
- rewove vs rewoven
- dests vs desks