Definition of radiocarbon in English:
 radiocarbon
noun ˌreɪdɪəʊˈkɑːb(ə)nˌreɪdioʊˈkɑrbən
mass nounChemistry A radioactive isotope of carbon.
 Example sentencesExamples
-  Dark Age people might possibly have been burning very old wood, if they'd found it in a bog, and in that case radiocarbon would date the growth of the tree, not the time if its burning.
 -  Also contamination of an object with more recent radiocarbon, leading to an inaccurate date, is always a threat and difficult to detect.
 -  These data were compared with the distribution of radiocarbon in free glucose and fructose isolated from the same sample.
 -  Living organisms acquire a characteristic minor fraction of radiocarbon by equilibrating with the carbon dioxide of ambient air or surrounding waters.
 -  Some of these neutrons react with nitrogen atoms in air, converting them into a radioactive isotope of carbon: carbon - 14 or radiocarbon, with eight neutrons in each nucleus.
 
Rhymes
  
carbon, chlorofluorocarbon, graben, hydrocarbon, Laban
   Definition of radiocarbon in US English:
 radiocarbon
nounˌrādēōˈkärbənˌreɪdioʊˈkɑrbən
Chemistry A radioactive isotope of carbon.
 Example sentencesExamples
-  Some of these neutrons react with nitrogen atoms in air, converting them into a radioactive isotope of carbon: carbon - 14 or radiocarbon, with eight neutrons in each nucleus.
 -  Also contamination of an object with more recent radiocarbon, leading to an inaccurate date, is always a threat and difficult to detect.
 -  Living organisms acquire a characteristic minor fraction of radiocarbon by equilibrating with the carbon dioxide of ambient air or surrounding waters.
 -  These data were compared with the distribution of radiocarbon in free glucose and fructose isolated from the same sample.
 -  Dark Age people might possibly have been burning very old wood, if they'd found it in a bog, and in that case radiocarbon would date the growth of the tree, not the time if its burning.