Términos
Resultado de búsqueda
coadjuntor
Definición
Se refiere a clérigos cristianos que tiene a cargo una parroquia. El término el empleado de manera común para denotar asistentes o clérigos sin beneficios que ayudan o reemplazan temporalmente a sacerdotes, vicarios, rectores y para otras labores parroquiales.
Jerarquía
Coahuiltecan (language family)
Definición
Language family of the indigenous people of south Texas and adjacent Mexico; it is uncertain how closely or if these languages were all actually related, because documentation is scarce. However, the term is still used as a term of convenience for the languages of this region.
Jerarquía
coal heaters
Definición
Heaters for the burning of coal. May be for industrial or domestic use.
Jerarquía
coal mining waste
Definición
Waste material produced by the process of coal mining, that may include coal gangue found in mining heaps, the light gray, washed waste produced during coal preparation, the red-colored burnt coal gangue caused by pyrite oxidation, and a high percentage of coal itself.
Jerarquía
coal pans
Definición
Pans, often with legs, that are used to safely move hot coals from one location to another, or that fit under the grate of a coal stove and double as ash catchers. For small pails, generally made of metal, for holding or carrying coals, use "coal hods." For similar equipment that allows the containment of coals but also the heating of a room or the cooking of food, use "braziers (cooking, heating equipment.)."
Jerarquía
coal-tar epoxy
Definición
A thermosetting resin resulting from the carbonization of bituminous coal. It is used as protective coating in many applications, including for marbles and stones.
Jerarquía
coarriendo
Definición
La propiedad real mantenida y ocupada por dos o más personas en porciones iguales no divididas con el derecho de survivencia.
Jerarquía
coarse painters
Definición
Designation used for painters in 14th- through 18th-century northern and southern Europe who specialized in decorative work or minor works rather than painting the main subjects of primary paintings. It was defined within the painters' guild of St. Luke; it also included house painters and varnishers. Coarse painters were considered of lower status than "artist painters."
Jerarquía
Coast Salish
Definición
Se refiere a la cultura india salish-parlante de la costa noroeste de Norteamérica, que viven alrededor del Estrecho de Georgia, Puget Sound, al sur de la isla Vancouver, gran parte de la Península Olympic y la mayoría en el oeste del estado de Washington.
Jerarquía
coastal deserts
Definición
Deserts along coasts, having cool winters followed by moderately long, warm summers. The average summer temperature ranges from 13-24 degrees C; the average rainfall measures 8-13 cm annually. The soil is fine-textured with a moderate salt content.
Jerarquía
coastal settlements
Definición
Human settlements, ancient or modern, that exist along a coastline.
Jerarquía
coat of arms artists
Definición
People who specialize in creating images of coats of arms.
Jerarquía
coated paper
Definición
Paper coated on one or both sides with a mixture of a binder and pigment. The coating provides a smooth, enamel -like surface for writing and printing, producing a brighter appearance, either glossy or matte, and improved printability by preventing ink absorption. A type of coated paper was used as early as 450 CE in China. Uniform machine-made coated papers have been used for over 100 years to provide optimum surfaces for printing. Some of the white pigments used in the coatings are barium sulfate, calcium carbonate, calcium sulfate, calcium sulfite, clay, diatomaceous earth, lead white, satin white, talc, zinc sulfide, lithopone, zinc oxide, and titanium dioxide. Over the years, the binders have changed from the early use of starch to include the use of linseed oil, gums, glues, and waxes. Recently, synthetic resins such as polyvinyl acetate, acrylic, and styrene-butadiene. The coatings are often burnished or calendered to produce a glossy finish.
Jerarquía
Coatepec
Jerarquía
cobalto (mineral)
Definición
El elemento metálico que tiene como símbolo Co y número atómico 27, es un metal duro, dúctil, blanco, parecido al níquel, pero con un azul en lugar de un tinte amarillo. El cobalto fue identificado por primera vez por Georg Brandt de Suecia en 1735. Tiene una abundancia de 0.001-0.002% en la corteza terrestre y se encuentra en minerales esmaltita, cobaltitas, chloanthite, linneíta y eritrina. El cobalto metálico se agrega a las aleaciones para aumentar la dureza a altas temperaturas. También es ferromagnético. Óxidos de cobalto y sales son generalmente de color azul y se utilizan como pigmentos en pinturas, vidrio y esmaltes cerámicos.
Términos Alternativos
- Co (símbolo químico)
Jerarquía
cobaltous arsenate
Definición
Material having the formula Co3(AsO4)2, used as a colorant in paints, glass, glazes, and enamels. It occurs in nature as cobalt bloom or erythrite; it was synthetically produced in 1880. It is highly toxic by ingestion, inhalation, and skin contact.
