释义 |
chlorinechlo‧rine /ˈklɔːriːn/ noun [uncountable]  chlorineOrigin: 1800-1900 Greek chloros ‘greenish yellow’ - But only a small number of cases have actually been linked to chlorine by-products.
- Exposed to sun and chlorine for six to seven hours a day, they pile on anything that will protect their skin.
- It showed how much lead and chlorine was in it.
- My eyes were stinging from the chlorine.
- The familiar dark soured then stung with chlorine.
- They are about 8 microns in diameter and probably consist largely of chlorides, that is, of compounds containing chlorine.
- Water treatment facilities are non-existent in the area, with chemicals such as chlorine unobtainable to stop the outbreak.
► Elementsaluminium, nounargon, nounarsenic, nounbarium, nounbase metal, nounbismuth, nouncadmium, nouncaesium, nouncalcium, nouncarbon, nounchlorine, nounchromium, nouncobalt, nouncopper, nounferrous, adjectivegold, noungold, adjectivegolden, adjectivehalogen, nounhydro-, prefixhydrogen, nouniodine, nouniridium, nouniron, nounisotope, nounkrypton, nounlead, nounlithium, nounmagnesium, nounmanganese, nounmercury, nounmolybdenum, nounnickel, nounnitrogen, nounoxygen, nounphosphorus, nounplatinum, nounplutonium, nounpotassium, nounprecious metal, nounradium, nounradon, nounselenium, nounsilicon, nounsilver, nounsilver, adjectivesodium, nounstrontium, nountin, nountin, adjectivetitanium, nountrace element, nountungsten, nounuranium, nounxenon, nounzinc, noun a greenish-yellow gas with a strong smell that is used to keep the water in swimming pools clean. It is a chemical element: symbol Cl |