Bone Ash

Word BONE ASH
Character 8
Hyphenation N/A
Pronunciations N/A

Definitions and meanings of "Bone Ash"

What do we mean by bone ash?

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word bone-ash. Define bone-ash, bone-ash synonyms, bone-ash pronunciation, bone-ash translation, English dictionary definition of bone-ash.

A Otherwise very ashy black person. Urban Dictionary

An otherwise very ashy black person. Urban Dictionary

Synonyms and Antonyms for Bone Ash

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The word "bone-ash" in example sentences

Add 14 lbs. of pure freshburnt lime to the wetted sand, and while beating it up together add, in successive portions, 14 lbs. of bone-ash. ❋ Unknown (2004)

We thus find that when made from bones alone, the cost of that substance is not unfrequently as high as £40 per ton, and when bone-ash alone is used it is sometimes as low as £20. ❋ Thomas Anderson (N/A)

Superphosphates from bone-ash, on the other hand, contain a mere trifle of ammonia, and when well made a very large quantity of biphosphate of lime. ❋ Thomas Anderson (N/A)

Dissolve in hydrochloric acid a small piece of the powdered bone-ash obtained from Experiment 3. ❋ Albert F. Blaisdell (N/A)

For all other manures, of which bones and bone-ash form the basis, £7 may be taken as a fair price, and it is that usually adopted, though £8 and £10 have sometimes been assumed as the average. ❋ Thomas Anderson (N/A)

_ -- These are purchased alone, chiefly in the form of coprolites and bone-ash, or the spent animal charcoal of the sugar refiners. ❋ Thomas Anderson (N/A)

It is the principal inorganic constituent of bones, and hence of the "bone-ash" of commerce (see PHOSPHORUS); it occurs with fluorides in the mineral apatite (_q. v._); and the concretions known as coprolites ❋ Various (N/A)

Coarser bone-dust, powdered animal charcoal, bone-ash 67 ❋ Charles Morton Aikman (N/A)

This body is similar in composition to bone-ash, except for a certain percentage of charcoal -- amounting, on an average, to 10 per cent. ❋ Charles Morton Aikman (N/A)

Coprolites are seldom used alone for the manufacture of superphosphates, but are generally mixed with bone-ash and bone dust. ❋ Thomas Anderson (N/A)

In the ordinary so-called raw phosphates, such as bone-meal, bone-ash, coprolites, &c., the lime and phosphoric acid are combined in the form of what is known, in chemical phraseology, as _tribasic phosphate of lime_. ❋ Charles Morton Aikman (N/A)

When heated in a closed retort, bones are not converted into bone-ash, but into a body called bone-char. ❋ Charles Morton Aikman (N/A)

Their quality differs very greatly, and depends, of course, on that of the bone-ash employed, which can rarely be obtained of quality sufficient to yield more than 30 or 35 per cent of soluble phosphates. ❋ Thomas Anderson (N/A)

It is easy to understand why bone-ash should sell at double the price of coprolites, but no good reason can be shewn why the phosphates in one kind of guano should be sold at a much higher price than another, and the difference would probably disappear if greater attention were paid to the results of field experiments. ❋ Thomas Anderson (N/A)

Peruvian guano; insoluble phosphates in coprolites; and soluble phosphates in superphosphates, made from bone-ash alone. ❋ Thomas Anderson (N/A)

As showing the composition of bone-ash, the following analysis may be quoted: -- ❋ Charles Morton Aikman (N/A)

Another prescription is to go to the burying-ground, and, after worshipping it, to take some of the bone-ash of a burnt corpse and wear this wrapped up in an amulet on the body. ❋ Robert Vane Russell (1894)

~The cupels~ are made of well-burnt bone-ash, of the fineness of coarse wheat flour, moistened with one-twelfth its weight of water and compressed into shape in suitable moulds. ❋ Cornelius Beringer (1886)

Portions of the alloy containing the weight of gold required (say 0.1 milligram) are then weighed off and cupelled on small smooth cupels, made with the finest bone-ash. ❋ Cornelius Beringer (1886)

The buttons are removed from the cupel with a pair of pliers and then brushed to remove adherent litharge and bone-ash. ❋ Cornelius Beringer (1886)

Kid 1: [Yo Nigga]. Kid 2: Sup [my nigga]. Kid 1: I saw this bitch last night,she had some [mad ash] bones. Kid 2: DAMN!!!! ❋ Superdupperjohnb (2008)

Kid#1: Yo homie [i seen] this bitch yesterday, she had some [mad Ash] [Bones]. Kid#2: DAMN!!! ❋ Superdupperjohnb (2008)

Cross Reference for Bone Ash

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