different between substitution vs pentatomic

substitution

English

Etymology

From Middle French substitution, from Late Latin substitutio.

Pronunciation

  • (US) IPA(key): /?s?bst??tu??n/
  • (UK) IPA(key): /?s?bst??tju???n/

Noun

substitution (countable and uncountable, plural substitutions)

  1. The act of substituting or the state of being substituted.
  2. A substitute or replacement.
  3. (chemistry, especially organic chemistry) The replacement of an atom, or group of atoms, in a compound, with another.
  4. (linguistics) The expansion of the lexicon of a language by native means in correspondence to a foreign term.
    Hypernym: loan
    Hyponyms: loan coinage, loan meaning
    Coordinate term: importation

Derived terms

Translations

Anagrams

  • bustitutions

French

Etymology

From Latin substit?ti?.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /syp.sti.ty.sj??/

Noun

substitution f (plural substitutions)

  1. substitution

Related terms

  • substituer

Further reading

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

substitution From the web:

  • what substitution means
  • what substitution should be used to rewrite
  • what substitution reaction
  • what substitution is present in cresol
  • what does substitution
  • do so substitution


pentatomic

English

Alternative forms

  • penta-atomic
  • pentaatomic

Etymology

penta- +? atomic

Adjective

pentatomic (not comparable)

  1. (chemistry) Having five atoms in each molecule.
  2. (chemistry) Having five hydrogen atoms capable of substitution.

Translations

Anagrams

  • camptonite, compatient

pentatomic From the web:

  • what pentatonic scale to use
  • what pentatonic scale to learn first
  • what pentatonic scales go together
  • what pentatonic scale to use for key of g
  • what pentatonic scale for key of a
  • what's pentatonic scale
  • what pentatonic scale is the key of g
  • what pentatonic scale is key of c
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