See also: Halid

English

edit

Etymology 1

edit

Noun

edit

halid (plural halids)

  1. (zoology) Any spider in the now obsolete family Halidae, which since 2006 is considered part of the family Pisauridae.
Usage notes
edit

For a list of the three species, see   Halidae on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

Etymology 2

edit

Noun

edit

halid (plural halids)

  1. (chemistry) Archaic form of halide.
    • 1906, Rudolph August Witthaus, The Medical Student's Manual of Chemistry, W. Wood & Company, page 352:
      These compounds,[the alkyl halids] also known as halid anhydrids, are the halogen compounds of the acidyls.
    • 1911 October, Francis I. du Pont, “1,004,815. Liquid Gravity Separation of Solids”, in Official Gazette of the United States Patent Office, Volume 171, United States Patent Office, page 94:
      The process of liquid separation of solids, which consists in separating the solids in a liquid which is the halid of a metal, whose halids are volatilizable, conveying the separated ingredients produced by the separation from the liquid and subjecting the same to a heat sufficient to volatilize, and adding to the liquid a halid of ammonia prior to said volatilization.
    • 1917, William Conger Morgan, Qualitative Analysis as a Laboratory Basis for the Study of General Inorganic Chemistry, Macmillan, page 109:
      All the mercury halids show a great tendency toward the formation of complex ions of this same type with the halids of other metallic elements.

Anagrams

edit

Welsh

edit

Etymology

edit

Borrowed from English halide, serendipitously analysable as hâl (salt) +‎ -id.

Pronunciation

edit

Noun

edit

halid m (plural halidau, not mutable)

  1. (inorganic chemistry) halide[1]

Hyponyms

edit
edit
  • hâl (salt (chemistry))

References

edit
  1. ^ Griffiths, Bruce, Glyn Jones, Dafydd (1995) Geiriadur yr Academi: The Welsh Academy English–Welsh Dictionary[1], Cardiff: University of Wales Press, →ISBN