METAL vs BIMETAL: NOUN
- That of which anything is composed; formative material; hence, constitution; intrinsic quality, as of a person.
- The aggregate number, mass, or effective power of the guns carried by a ship of war.
- Materials for roads; especially, the broken stones used as ballasting on a road-bed or railway.
- In heraldry, one of the two tinctures or and argent—that is, gold and silver.
- Plural The rails of a railway.
- The material of glass, pottery, etc., in a state of fusion.
- In printing and type-founding See type-metal.
- An elementary substance, or one which in the present state of chemical science is undecompos able, and which possesses opacity, luster of a peculiar kind (commonly called metallic, because very characteristic of the metals), conductivity for heat and electricity, and plasticity, or capability of being drawn, squeezed, or hammered with change of shape but no loss of continuity.
- A metallic alloy used for the production, by casting in iron or brass molds, of cheap ornamental articles to be electroplated, usually consisting of lead and tin hardened by antimony, with occasional addition of other metals.
- Plural A general name for coal-bearing strata.
- Hard rock; whin or igneous rock.
- Cast-iron.
- Courage; spirit; mettle. In this sense now always mettle.
- Heavy metal.
- Type made of metal.
- Molten cast iron.
- Molten glass, especially when used in glassmaking.
- Broken stones used for road surfaces or railroad beds.
- Basic character; mettle.
- An object made of metal.
- An alloy of two or more metallic elements.
- Any of a category of electropositive elements that usually have a shiny surface, are generally good conductors of heat and electricity, and can be melted or fused, hammered into thin sheets, or drawn into wires. Typical metals form salts with nonmetals, basic oxides with oxygen, and alloys with one another.
- A mixture containing two or more metallic elements or metallic and nonmetallic elements usually fused together or dissolving into each other when molten
- In mining:
- A category of rock music encompassing a number of genres (including thrash metal, death metal, heavy metal, etc.) characterized by strong, fast drum-beats and distorted guitars.
- Molten glass that is to be blown or moulded to form objects
- A light tincture used in a coat of arms, specifically argent and or.
- Crushed rock, stones etc. used to make a road.
- Any material with similar physical properties, such as an alloy.
- Any of a number of chemical elements in the periodic table that form a metallic bond with other metal atoms; generally shiny, somewhat malleable and hard, often a conductor of heat and electricity.
- An alloy resembling brass, consisting of three parts of copper to one of zinc; -- also called Prince Rupert's metal.
- An alloy for sheathing and other purposes, consisting of about sixty per cent of copper, and forty of zinc. Sometimes a little lead is added. It is named from the inventor.
- The metallic elements of the alkali and alkaline earth groups, as sodium, lithium, calcium, magnesium, etc.; also, sometimes, the metals of the earths, as aluminium.
- The metallic elements not included in the groups of the alkalies, alkaline earths, or the earths; specifically, the heavy metals, as gold, mercury, platinum, lead, silver, etc.
- Any of several chemical elements that are usually shiny solids that conduct heat or electricity and can be formed into sheets etc.
- Any one of the metals, as iron, lead, etc., which are readily tarnished or oxidized, in contrast with the noble metals. In general, a metal of small value, as compared with gold or silver.
- The rails of a railroad.
- Glass in a state of fusion.
- The effective power or caliber of guns carried by a vessel of war.
- The broken stone used in macadamizing roads and ballasting railroads.
- Courage; spirit; mettle. See Mettle.
- The substance of which anything is made; material; hence, constitutional disposition; character; temper.
- A mine from which ores are taken.
- Ore from which a metal is derived; -- so called by miners.
- An elementary substance, as sodium, calcium, or copper, whose oxide or hydroxide has basic rather than acid properties, as contrasted with the nonmetals, or metalloids. No sharp line can be drawn between the metals and nonmetals, and certain elements partake of both acid and basic qualities, as chromium, manganese, bismuth, etc.
- See blue.
- A mine.
- A very fusible alloy, usually consisting of bismuth with lead, tin, or cadmium.
- Material made by bonding together sheets of two different metals
METAL vs BIMETAL: ADJECTIVE
- N/A
- Formed of two different metals or alloys; especially in sheets bonded together
- Consisting of two metals.
METAL vs BIMETAL: VERB
- Cover with metal
- N/A
METAL vs BIMETAL: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To cover or surface (a roadbed, for example) with broken stones.
- To cover with metal
- N/A
METAL vs BIMETAL: OTHER WORD TYPES
- An abbreviation of metallurgy.
- To put metal on; cover, as roads, with broken stones or metal.
- Containing or made of or resembling or characteristic of a metal
- N/A
METAL vs BIMETAL: RELATED WORDS
- Gold bearing, Antimonial, Aluminiferous, Tinny, Golden, Auriferous, Gilded, Bronze, Argentiferous, Aluminous, Bimetallic, Bimetal, Gold, Silver, Metallic
- Phototransistor, Busbar, Workpiece, Rotary actuator, Alloy, Sacrificial anode, Potentiometer, Ferrule, Phosphor bronze, Thermistor, Cermet, Thermocouple, Metal, Metallic, Bimetallic
METAL vs BIMETAL: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Gold bearing, Antimonial, Aluminiferous, Tinny, Golden, Auriferous, Gilded, Bronze, Argentiferous, Aluminous, Bimetallic, Bimetal, Gold, Silver, Metallic
- Phototransistor, Busbar, Workpiece, Rotary actuator, Alloy, Sacrificial anode, Potentiometer, Ferrule, Phosphor bronze, Thermistor, Cermet, Thermocouple, Metal, Metallic, Bimetallic
METAL vs BIMETAL: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Exports are tobacco, woodpulp, bulk cement, fabricated metal products and scrap metal.
- In cases where metal contaminants are present, insufficient P increases metal availability.
- PRECIOUS METAL AND SCRAP METAL DEALERS; RECEIVING STOLEN PROPERTY.
- Any metal finishing or metal working done on site?
- Beyond for creative and unique metal wall decor, including metal tree wall art, metal flower wall art, and more.
- Metal Products We carry Rebar, Wire Mesh, Snap Ties, Wire Ties, Form Stakes, metal Lathe and many other metal products.
- Training includes drafting, math, sheet metal layout, service work, architectural sheet metal, field installation, welding, sheet metal sketching, blueprint reading, plastic, residential heating, CAD,
- It has the small single metal rivet method of attaching the metal handle to the metal head.
- SAMAEL is a black metal, symphonic black metal, industrial metal music artist.
- NEW METAL: Use Alkyd Metal Primer to prevent corrosion; product may also be used direct to metal.
- These use a strip of bimetal similar to that used in a thermostat.
- Cheap spray lube plus bimetal holesaw blades make short work of installing an electric subpanel, plumbing, etc.
- Lower ignitor resistance increases the current flow through the bimetal coil.
- There is a bimetal at the end of the probe.
- Turned the defrost on the heater and bimetal, good.
- Iron expands less than brass so bimetal curved inside when the temperature increases.
- The bimetal springs, etc all look clean and flex nicely.
- This is a family of controllers with bimetal spring disks.
- Find here online price details of companies selling Bimetal Thermostat.
- Fixed Temperature Thermostat Switches Bimetal Snap Disc Style.
METAL vs BIMETAL: QUESTIONS
- How many Russian metal bands have we covered on metal underground?
- What happens when a metal is alloyed with another metal?
- Is iodine classified as a metal non metal or metalloid?
- How much metal is needed to trigger a metal detector?
- Why choose Lee metal fabrication for your sheet metal products?
- How to track live metal prices from London Metal Exchange?
- Can aluminium foil hide metal from metal detectors?
- How to prevent metal detector from detecting metal?
- How to cut metal without traditional metal cutting tools?
- Which is more electronegative transition metal or main metal?
- What is the maximum temperature that a bimetal thermometer can withstand?