of or containing iodine, esp in the pentavalent state
iodic in American English
(aɪˈɑdɪk)
adjective
designating, of, or containing iodine, esp. pentavalent iodine
iodic in American English
(aiˈɑdɪk)
adjective
Chemistry
containing iodine, esp. in the pentavalent state
Word origin
[1820–30; iod- + -ic]This word is first recorded in the period 1820–30. Other words that entered Englishat around the same time include: analogue, blouse, karma, morphology, tetrapod-ic is a suffix forming adjectives from other parts of speech, occurring originally inGreek and Latin loanwords (metallic; poetic; archaic; public) and, on this model, used as an adjective-forming suffix with the particular senses“having some characteristics of” (opposed to the simple attributive use of the basenoun) (balletic; sophomoric); “in the style of” (Byronic; Miltonic); “pertaining to a family of peoples or languages” (Finnic; Semitic; Turkic)
Examples of 'iodic' in a sentence
iodic
On the contrary, even these iodic contrast media can lead to a serious reacton.
Rade R Babic 2006, 'ANAPHYLACTIC SHOCK CAUSED BY IOPROMIDE IN UROGRAPHY', Acta Medica Medianaehttp://publisher.medfak.ni.ac.rs/2006-html/4-broj/ANAFILAKTICKI%20SOK%20IZAZVAN%20IOPROMIDOM%20PRI%20UROGRAFIJI.pdf. Retrieved from DOAJ CC BY 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/legalcode)
Other leaves in iodic acid, diluted to the same degree, showed after 2 hrs.
Charles Darwin Insectivorous Plants (1875). Retrieved in 2019 from Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/)