| acid poisoning |
The acids, generally, are strong corrosive poisons. Symptoms: sour, acrid taste; burning in the throat, which is increased by pressure, swallowing, or coughing; eructation, and excruciating pain in the stomach; more or less corrugation of the lining membranes of the mouth and primae viae; excoriation about the mouth or such other parts of the skin as the acid may have touched. The matter vomited effervesces with carbonate of lime. ...
Ãâó: www.antiquusmorbus.com/English/Poison.htm
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| acidic |
having a pH of less than 7.
Ãâó: www.nutrabio.com/Definitions/definitions_a.htm
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| acid rain |
Precipitation which has been rendered (made) acidic by airborne pollutants.
Ãâó: www.nsc.org/ehc/glossary.htm
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| acid-base indicator |
A weak acid or weak base, such as litmus or phenolphthalein, which changes color when it gains or loses an H + ion.
Ãâó: xenon.che.ilstu.edu/genchemhelphomepage/glossary/a...
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| acidic |
Condition of water, soil, or a solution containing excess hydrogen atoms producing a pH of less than 7; the opposite of alkaline. Sour or sharp-tasting liquids such as lemonade, orange juice, and vinegar are acidic. If soil or water is too acidic, plants cannot grow.
Ãâó: www.ecohealth101.org/glossary.html
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