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)

  1. The act of causing to rot; the anaerobic splitting of proteins by bacteria and fungi with the formation of malodorous, incompletely oxidized products.
  2. Rotten material.
  3. 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)

  1. (medicine) rot; rottenness

putrefaction From the web:

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spoiling

English

Verb

spoiling

  1. present participle of spoil

Noun

spoiling (plural spoilings)

  1. 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 []

Anagrams

  • pignolis

spoiling From the web:

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