different between brine vs mydaleine
brine
English
Etymology
From Middle English brine, bryne, from Old English br?ne, br?ne, from Proto-Germanic *br?nijaz, *br?naz (compare Scots brime, West Frisian brein, Dutch brijn (“brine”), West Flemish brijne), from Proto-Indo-European *b?reyH- (“to cut, maim”). Cognates include Old Irish ro·bria (“may hurt, damage”), Latin fri?re (“to rub, crumble”), Slovene bríti (“to shave, shear”), Albanian brej (“to gnaw”), Sanskrit ?????? (b????ti, “they injure, hurt”).
Alternatively, from Proto-Indo-European *mriHnós, from *móri (compare Latin mar?nus).
Pronunciation
- enPR: br?n, IPA(key): /b?a?n/
- Rhymes: -a?n
Noun
brine (usually uncountable, plural brines)
- Salt water; water saturated or strongly impregnated with salt; a salt-and-water solution for pickling.
- The sea or ocean; the water of the sea.
Derived terms
Translations
Verb
brine (third-person singular simple present brines, present participle brining, simple past and past participle brined)
- (transitive) To preserve food in a salt solution.
- (transitive) To prepare and flavor food (especially meat) for cooking by soaking in a salt solution.
Antonyms
- debrine
- desalinate
Derived terms
- debrine
- embrine
- briner
Translations
See also
- bittern
Anagrams
- Biren, Brien, biner, rebin
Italian
Noun
brine f
- plural of brina
Anagrams
- nerbi
Old English
Alternative forms
- br?ne
Etymology
From Proto-Germanic *br?nijaz, *br?naz; compare Middle Dutch brine (Dutch brijn).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?bri?.ne/
Noun
br?ne f
- brine
Descendants
- English: brine
Serbo-Croatian
Verb
brine (Cyrillic spelling ?????)
- third-person singular present of brinuti
Slovene
Noun
brine
- accusative plural of brin
brine From the web:
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mydaleine
English
Etymology
Ancient Greek [Term?]
Noun
mydaleine (uncountable)
- (chemistry) A ptomaine obtained from putrid flesh and herring brines.
Anagrams
- diamylene
mydaleine From the web:
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