释义 |
metallurgymet‧al‧lur‧gy /məˈtælədʒi $ ˈmetəlɜːrdʒi/ noun [uncountable] metallurgyOrigin: 1700-1800 Modern Latin metallurgia, from Greek metallon ( ➔ METAL) + -ergos ‘working’ - He also published papers on social topics and had a great interest in historical metallurgy.
- He taught courses in engineering and metallurgy.
- He thus achieved distinction in both ferrous and non-ferrous metallurgy.
- Hiking Sue, a graduate from London's Imperial College in 1979, has degrees in materials science and metallurgy.
- They are noted for their strength, tenacity, magical powers and skills in metallurgy.
- They covered every imaginable subject from metallurgy to medicine, from good building techniques to good manners.
- This is partly owing to the understandings that it has provided, in certain technologically important areas such as chemistry and metallurgy.
- Two years of study, postwar, mining and metallurgy, with a wife to encourage him.
► HARD SCIENCEbaseline, nounboffin, nounconservation, nounconservationist, nouncontrol, nouncorrelation, noundouble-blind, adjectiveformula, nouninorganic, adjectiveinorganic chemistry, noun-logy, suffixmetallurgy, nounmicroscope, nounnatural science, nounnomenclature, noun-ologist, suffix-ology, suffixosmosis, nounphysical science, nounpipette, nounscience, nounscience park, nounscientist, nountechnical, adjectivetest tube, nountheoretical, adjectivetheoretically, adverbtheorist, nountheorize, verbtheory, nountoxicology, noun the scientific study of metals and their uses—metallurgist noun [countable]—metallurgical /ˌmetəˈlɜːdʒɪkəl◂ $ -ˈlɜːr-/ adjective |