different between ozone vs azone

ozone

English

Etymology

From German Ozon, coined 1840 by Christian Friedrich Schönbein, from Ancient Greek ???? (ózon), neuter participle of ??? (óz?, I smell), in reference to its pungent odour.

The “fresh air” sense is from an erroneous former belief that seaweed contains and releases ozone.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?o?zo?n/, /???z??n/

Noun

ozone (uncountable)

  1. (inorganic chemistry) An allotrope of oxygen (symbol O?) having three atoms in the molecule instead of the usual two; it is a toxic gas, generated from oxygen by electrical discharge.
    Hypernym: greenhouse gas
  2. (Britain, informal) Fresh air, especially that breathed at the seaside and smelling of seaweed.
    • 1875, William Crookes, The Chemical News, page 99,
      A patent obtained in England, and specified far from clearly, for obtaining ozone by boiling seaweed,†† may be mentioned as a curiosity, and also the credulity with which ozone-baths, prepared in this manner, find a ready sale, in spite of, or perhaps rather on account of, their high price.
    • 1888, L. T. Meade, A. Balfour Symington, Edwin Oliver, Atalanta, Volume 1, page 674,
      To Ramsgate baths she sped, in quest / Of seaweed and ozone ; / For seaweed and ozone were best, / They said, to give her tone.
    • 2007, Robert Douglas, Tales of the Unexpected, Somewhere to Lay My Head, unnumbered page,
      It's got the lot: fresh sea air, ozone, seaweed. You could cut the air with a knife.

Derived terms

Translations

Verb

ozone (third-person singular simple present ozones, present participle ozoning, simple past and past participle ozoned)

  1. (transitive) To treat with ozone.
    • 1868, Medical and Surgical Reporter (volume 19, page 392)
      Whenever it exists, as it usually does, even where the tide water freshens at the ebb, it seems to have a purifying tendency, probably by ozoning the superincumbent atmosphere.
    • 1997, Robert Sampson, Patricia Hughes, Breaking Out of Environmental Illness
      I worked nonstop to make the house safe. Periodically I ozoned the first-floor bathroom, but it still made us sick.

Further reading

  • ozone on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
  • “ozone”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–present.

French

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?.z?n/, /?.zon/, /o.zon/

Noun

ozone m (plural ozones)

  1. ozone (O3)

Derived terms

  • couche d'ozone

Further reading

  • “ozone” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).

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azone

English

Noun

azone (plural azones)

  1. (organic chemistry, medicine) Any azo derivative of a ketone, but especially any of a family of aliphatic azo derivatives of cycloheptanone that are used to increase the permeability of skin in order to facilitate drug uptake

Anagrams

  • zonae, zonæ

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