What is the meaning of CINDE. Phrases containing CINDE
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CINDE
CINDE
A friable volcanic rock or conglomerate, formed of consolidated cinders, or scoria.
CINDE
n.
Charcoal; a cinder.
n.
The last cinders obtained in the fining process.
n.
A volcanic rock, formed by the cementing together of sand, scoria, cinders, etc.
n.
To reduce to coal or carbon by exposure to heat; to reduce to charcoal; to burn to a cinder.
n.
A sieve with coarse meshes, usually of wire, for separating coarser materials from finer, as chaff from grain, cinders from ashes, or gravel from sand.
v. t.
The dross, or recrement, of a metal; also, vitrified cinders.
n.
A hot coal without flame; an ember.
n.
A mountain or hill, usually more or less conical in form, from which lava, cinders, steam, sulphur gases, and the like, are ejected; -- often popularly called a burning mountain.
n.
The slag of a furnace, or scoriaceous lava from a volcano.
a.
Burnt to cinders.
n.
A scale thrown off in forging metal.
n.
A refractory material used as a furnace lining, obtained by calcining the cinder or slag from the puddling furnace of a rolling mill.
n.
A white to gray volcanic tufa, formed of decomposed trachytic cinders; -- sometimes used as a cement. Hence, a coarse sort of plaster or mortar, durable in water, and used to line cisterns and other reservoirs of water.
n.
A mixture of ore, cinders, etc., used to line the hearth of a puddling furnace.
n.
Refuse coal, coal ashes, and cinders, used in the burning of bricks.
a.
Resembling, or composed of, cinders; full of cinders.
n.
Cellular slaggy lava; volcanic cinders.
n.
An accumulation of refuse about a dwelling place; especially, an accumulation of shells or of cinders, bones, and other refuse on the supposed site of the dwelling places of prehistoric tribes, -- as on the shores of the Baltic Sea and in many other places. See Kitchen middens.
a.
To cover or line with a mixture of ore, cinders, etc., as the hearth of a puddling furnace.
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