| pig |
Boar and sow pig.
Ãâó: www.bartleby.com/81/7067.html
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| pigment |
Various minerals and matter ground up and mixed with a fluid medium to create paints and colorants. Pigments can come from mined stones, plants or even from clays.
Ãâó: www.brigantine.atlnet.org/GigapaletteGALLERY/websi...
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| pigmentation |
Any coloring matter in tissues.
Ãâó: www.howardnations.com/burns/burns_glossary.html
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| pig |
A container, usually lead, used to ship or store radioactive materials. The thick walls protect an individual handling the container from radiation. Large containers are commonly called casks.
Ãâó: www.oehs.wayne.edu/health%20phsics/glossaryP.html
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| pigment |
Highly colored, insoluble substance used to impart color to other materials. White pigments, eg, titanium dioxide, are dispersed in fiber polymers to produce delustered (semi-dull and dull) fibers. Colored pigments are added to polymer to create producer colored or solution dyed yarns.
Ãâó: antron.dupont.com/content/resources/carpet_glossar...
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| PIG | dry coloring matter (especially an insoluble powder to be mixed with a liquid to produce paint etc) |
|---|---|
| PIG | color or dye with a pigment |
| PIG | acquire pigment |
| PIG | coloration of living tissues by pigment |
| PIG | the deposition of pigment in animals or plants or human beings |
| PIG | any member of various peoples having an average height of less than five feet |
| PIG | an unusually small individual |
| PIG | low plant with crowded narrow succulent leaves and fairly large deep pink axillary flowers that seem to sit on the ground |
| PIG | edible seed of any of several nut pines especially some pinons of southwestern North America |
| PIG | an American hickory tree having bitter nuts |
| PIG | an American hickory tree having bitter nuts |
| PIG | a pen for swine |
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