prill
See also: Prill
English
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -ɪl
Etymology 1
A variant of purl, 17th century.
Verb
prill (third-person singular simple present prills, present participle prilling, simple past and past participle prilled)
- to flow, spurt
- (Can we find and add a quotation of Stow to this entry?)
Noun
prill (plural prills)
- a rill, a small stream
- 1603, John Davies, Microcosmos
- Each silver Prill gliding on golden Sand
- 1603, John Davies, Microcosmos
- (obsolete) a spinning top
Etymology 2
Unknown. OED mentions Cornish pryl (“sheep-droppings”) as a likely loan from English.
Noun
prill (plural prills)
- a pellet, a granule, a small bead
- 2000, R. R. Fullwood, Probabilistic Safety Assessment in the Chemical and Nuclear Industries, page 275
- Prills are free-flowing pellets developed for fertilizer as a coarse product with little setting tendency that can be spread easily and smoothly.
- 2007, Stan A. David, Trends in Welding Research: Proceedings of the 7Th International, page 661
- The resulting solution is evaporated and converted into prills, i.e. dense flakes or grains, of solid ammonium nitrate.
- 2000, R. R. Fullwood, Probabilistic Safety Assessment in the Chemical and Nuclear Industries, page 275
- rich copper ore remaining after removal of low-grade material; a droplet of copper suspended in molten slag
- (mining) A nugget of virgin metal.
- The button of metal from an assay.
Translations
a nugget of virgin metal
|
|
Verb
prill (third-person singular simple present prills, present participle prilling, simple past and past participle prilled)
- to produce pellets by forming a molten substance into droplets which solidify while falling
Synonyms
Derived terms
Translations
to produce pellets
|
Albanian
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.