different between putrefaction vs spoiling
putrefaction
English
Etymology
First attested between 1350 and 1400 from Middle English putrefaccioun, from Old French putrefaccïon, from Latin putrefacti?, from putrefactus, perfect passive participle of putrefaci? (“become rotten”)
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?pju?t???fæk??n/
Noun
putrefaction (countable and uncountable, plural putrefactions)
- The act of causing to rot; the anaerobic splitting of proteins by bacteria and fungi with the formation of malodorous, incompletely oxidized products.
- Rotten material.
- The state of being rotten.
Related terms
- putrescent
- putrefactive
- putrefacient
- putrefy
- putrid
Translations
References
Old French
Etymology
Borrowed from Latin putrefacti?.
Noun
putrefaction f (oblique plural putrefactions, nominative singular putrefaction, nominative plural putrefactions)
- (medicine) rot; rottenness
putrefaction From the web:
- putrefaction meaning
- what does putrefaction mean
- what is putrefaction in biology
- what is putrefaction of food
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- what is putrefaction in forensic chemistry
- what is putrefaction in histopathology
spoiling
English
Verb
spoiling
- present participle of spoil
Noun
spoiling (plural spoilings)
- plunder; pillage
- May 10, 1775, Benjamin Franklin, Proposed Preamble to a Congressional Resolution on Privateering
- […] all the spoilings, thefts, burnings of houses and towns, and murders of innocent people, perpetrated by their wicked and inhuman corsairs on our coasts […]
- May 10, 1775, Benjamin Franklin, Proposed Preamble to a Congressional Resolution on Privateering
Anagrams
- pignolis
spoiling From the web:
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- what spoiling meaning in arabic
- what does spoilage mean
- what does spoiling a child mean
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- what does spoiling for a fight mean
- what is spoiling macbeth's peace
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