Calcium pronunciation

  1. How to Pronounce calcium
  2. Calcium
  3. Calcite Definition & Meaning
  4. Calcium
  5. Calcite Definition & Meaning
  6. How to Pronounce calcium
  7. Calcium


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How to Pronounce calcium

Click on the microphone icon and begin speaking Calcium. Permission to use microphone was denied. Permission to use microphone is blocked. To change, go to chrome://settings/content Exceptions#media-stream. Click the "Allow" button above to enable your microphone. No microphone was found. Ensure that a microphone is installed and that Web Speech API is not supported by this browser. Upgrade to • kalsium Afrikaans • كلسيوم, الكلسيوم Arabic • кальцый Byelorussian • калций Bulgarian • kalsiom, kalkiom Breton • calci Catalan • vápník Czech • calsiwm Welch • calcium kalcium Danish • kalzium calcium German • ασβέστιο Greek • kalcio Esperanto • calcio Spanish • kaltsium Estonian • kaltzio Basque • کلسیم Persian • kalsium Finnish • kalsium Faeroese • calcium French • kalsium Frisian • cailciam Irish • cailceam Scots Gaelic • calcio Galician • kelkium Manx • קלציום, סידן Hebrew • चूर्णातु कैल् Hindi • kalcium Hungarian • կալցիում Armenian • calcium Interlingua • kalsium Indonesian • kalsín Icelandic • calcio Italian • ᓴᐅᓂᒃᓴᖅ Inuktitut • カルシウム, 石灰素 Japanese • კალციუმი Georgian • кальций Kazakh • 칼슘 Korean • calcyum greek • calcium Latin • Kalzium Luxembourgish • kalcis Lithuanian • kalcijs Latvian • diontsokay • калциум Macedonian • кальци Mongolian • zat kapur kalsium Malay • kalċju Maltese • kalsium • calcium Dutch • kalsium • káálsiiyin Navajo, Navaho • wapń Polish • cálcio Portuguese • calciu Romanian • кальций Russian • kalcijum, калциjум, kalcij, калциj Serbo • vápník Slovak •...

Calcium

a chemical element, atomic number 20, atomic weight 40.08. (See Appendix 6.) Calcium is the most abundant mineral in the body. In combination with phosphorus it forms calcium phosphate, the dense, hard material of the bones and teeth. It is an important cation in intracellular and extracellular fluid and is essential to the normal clotting of blood, the maintenance of a normal heartbeat, and the initiation of neuromuscular and metabolic activities. Within the body fluids calcium exists in three forms. Protein-bound calcium accounts for about 47 per cent of the calcium in plasma; most of it in this form is bound to albumin. Another 47 per cent of plasma calcium is ionized. About 6 per cent is complexed with phosphate, citrate, and other anions. Ionized calcium is physiologically active. One of its most important physiological functions is control of the permeability of cell membranes. Parathyroid hormone, which causes transfer of exchangeable calcium from bone into the blood stream, maintains calcium homeostasis by preventing either calcium deficit or excess. chvostek's sign. Dietary sources of calcium include dairy products (such as milk and cheese), soybeans, fortified orange juice, dark green leafy vegetables (such as mustard greens and broccoli), sardines, clams, and oysters. The allowance of calcium for children aged 4 to 8 is 800 mg, and that for women aged 50 to 70 is 1200 mg. (See tables in the Appendices for calcium channel blocker ( calcium channel blocking agent)...

Dictionary.com

a silver-white divalent metal, occurring combined in limestone, chalk, gypsum, etc., occurring also in vertebrates and other animals, as a component of bone, skeletal mass, shell, etc., and as a necessary element in nerve conduction, heartbeat, muscle contraction, and many other physiological functions. Symbol: Ca; atomic weight: 40.08; atomic number: 20; specific gravity: 1.55 at 20°C. a malleable silvery-white metallic element of the alkaline earth group; the fifth most abundant element in the earth's crust (3.6 per cent), occurring esp as forms of calcium carbonate. It is an essential constituent of bones and teeth and is used as a deoxidizer in steel. Symbol: Ca; atomic no: 20; atomic wt: 40.078; valency: 2; relative density: 1.55; melting pt: 842±2°C; boiling pt: 1494°C A silvery-white, moderately hard metallic element of the alkaline-earth group that occurs in limestone and gypsum. It is a basic component of leaves, bones, teeth, and shells, and is essential for the normal growth and development of most animals and plants. Calcium is used to make plaster, cement, and alloys. Atomic number 20; atomic weight 40.08; melting point 842 to 848°C; boiling point 1,487°C; specific gravity 1.55; valence 2. See Periodic Table.

Calcite Definition & Meaning

Recent Examples on the Web This is why the old gravestones of the Midwest are barely legible because acid rain created by factory pollution has dissolved a lot of the calcite in the limestone and marble gravestones. — Erik Klemetti, Discover Magazine, 27 Oct. 2016 Kelemen noticed that when the calcite film was shattered by wind or rain, it was replaced by a new film within 24 hours. — Douglas Fox, Scientific American, 1 July 2021 Knowing that our atmosphere can scatter sunlight and polarize it, Gábor Horváth, an optics scientist at Eötvös University in Budapest, and Susanne Åkesson, a migration ecologist from Lund University, Sweden decided to put calcite to the test. — Patrick Morgan, Discover Magazine, 31 Jan. 2011 When a crack appeared in the concrete, rainwater entered and dissolved the plastic, allowing the bacteria to metabolize and produce healing calcite. — Chris Holt, Discover Magazine, 23 Nov. 2021 This shield-like coating is made of calcite with high levels of magnesium, a type found only in one other biological structure: sea urchin teeth, which can grind limestone. — National Geographic, 25 Nov. 2020 The water dissolves calcite, a mineral in limestone, marble and dolostone, creating the characteristic sinkholes, caves and streamways. — Margaret Osborne, Smithsonian Magazine, 10 June 2022 Cement is manufactured by heating limestone (mostly calcite, or CaCO3), to produce lime (CaO). — David Fork, IEEE Spectrum, 28 June 2021 Yellow crystals, including calcite, ar...

Calcium

a chemical element, atomic number 20, atomic weight 40.08. (See Appendix 6.) Calcium is the most abundant mineral in the body. In combination with phosphorus it forms calcium phosphate, the dense, hard material of the bones and teeth. It is an important cation in intracellular and extracellular fluid and is essential to the normal clotting of blood, the maintenance of a normal heartbeat, and the initiation of neuromuscular and metabolic activities. Within the body fluids calcium exists in three forms. Protein-bound calcium accounts for about 47 per cent of the calcium in plasma; most of it in this form is bound to albumin. Another 47 per cent of plasma calcium is ionized. About 6 per cent is complexed with phosphate, citrate, and other anions. Ionized calcium is physiologically active. One of its most important physiological functions is control of the permeability of cell membranes. Parathyroid hormone, which causes transfer of exchangeable calcium from bone into the blood stream, maintains calcium homeostasis by preventing either calcium deficit or excess. chvostek's sign. Dietary sources of calcium include dairy products (such as milk and cheese), soybeans, fortified orange juice, dark green leafy vegetables (such as mustard greens and broccoli), sardines, clams, and oysters. The allowance of calcium for children aged 4 to 8 is 800 mg, and that for women aged 50 to 70 is 1200 mg. (See tables in the Appendices for calcium channel blocker ( calcium channel blocking agent)...

Calcite Definition & Meaning

Recent Examples on the Web This is why the old gravestones of the Midwest are barely legible because acid rain created by factory pollution has dissolved a lot of the calcite in the limestone and marble gravestones. — Erik Klemetti, Discover Magazine, 27 Oct. 2016 Kelemen noticed that when the calcite film was shattered by wind or rain, it was replaced by a new film within 24 hours. — Douglas Fox, Scientific American, 1 July 2021 Knowing that our atmosphere can scatter sunlight and polarize it, Gábor Horváth, an optics scientist at Eötvös University in Budapest, and Susanne Åkesson, a migration ecologist from Lund University, Sweden decided to put calcite to the test. — Patrick Morgan, Discover Magazine, 31 Jan. 2011 When a crack appeared in the concrete, rainwater entered and dissolved the plastic, allowing the bacteria to metabolize and produce healing calcite. — Chris Holt, Discover Magazine, 23 Nov. 2021 This shield-like coating is made of calcite with high levels of magnesium, a type found only in one other biological structure: sea urchin teeth, which can grind limestone. — National Geographic, 25 Nov. 2020 The water dissolves calcite, a mineral in limestone, marble and dolostone, creating the characteristic sinkholes, caves and streamways. — Margaret Osborne, Smithsonian Magazine, 10 June 2022 Cement is manufactured by heating limestone (mostly calcite, or CaCO3), to produce lime (CaO). — David Fork, IEEE Spectrum, 28 June 2021 Yellow crystals, including calcite, ar...

How to Pronounce calcium

Click on the microphone icon and begin speaking Calcium. Permission to use microphone was denied. Permission to use microphone is blocked. To change, go to chrome://settings/content Exceptions#media-stream. Click the "Allow" button above to enable your microphone. No microphone was found. Ensure that a microphone is installed and that Web Speech API is not supported by this browser. Upgrade to • kalsium Afrikaans • كلسيوم, الكلسيوم Arabic • кальцый Byelorussian • калций Bulgarian • kalsiom, kalkiom Breton • calci Catalan • vápník Czech • calsiwm Welch • calcium kalcium Danish • kalzium calcium German • ασβέστιο Greek • kalcio Esperanto • calcio Spanish • kaltsium Estonian • kaltzio Basque • کلسیم Persian • kalsium Finnish • kalsium Faeroese • calcium French • kalsium Frisian • cailciam Irish • cailceam Scots Gaelic • calcio Galician • kelkium Manx • קלציום, סידן Hebrew • चूर्णातु कैल् Hindi • kalcium Hungarian • կալցիում Armenian • calcium Interlingua • kalsium Indonesian • kalsín Icelandic • calcio Italian • ᓴᐅᓂᒃᓴᖅ Inuktitut • カルシウム, 石灰素 Japanese • კალციუმი Georgian • кальций Kazakh • 칼슘 Korean • calcyum greek • calcium Latin • Kalzium Luxembourgish • kalcis Lithuanian • kalcijs Latvian • diontsokay • калциум Macedonian • кальци Mongolian • zat kapur kalsium Malay • kalċju Maltese • kalsium • calcium Dutch • kalsium • káálsiiyin Navajo, Navaho • wapń Polish • cálcio Portuguese • calciu Romanian • кальций Russian • kalcijum, калциjум, kalcij, калциj Serbo • vápník Slovak •...

Dictionary.com

a silver-white divalent metal, occurring combined in limestone, chalk, gypsum, etc., occurring also in vertebrates and other animals, as a component of bone, skeletal mass, shell, etc., and as a necessary element in nerve conduction, heartbeat, muscle contraction, and many other physiological functions. Symbol: Ca; atomic weight: 40.08; atomic number: 20; specific gravity: 1.55 at 20°C. a malleable silvery-white metallic element of the alkaline earth group; the fifth most abundant element in the earth's crust (3.6 per cent), occurring esp as forms of calcium carbonate. It is an essential constituent of bones and teeth and is used as a deoxidizer in steel. Symbol: Ca; atomic no: 20; atomic wt: 40.078; valency: 2; relative density: 1.55; melting pt: 842±2°C; boiling pt: 1494°C A silvery-white, moderately hard metallic element of the alkaline-earth group that occurs in limestone and gypsum. It is a basic component of leaves, bones, teeth, and shells, and is essential for the normal growth and development of most animals and plants. Calcium is used to make plaster, cement, and alloys. Atomic number 20; atomic weight 40.08; melting point 842 to 848°C; boiling point 1,487°C; specific gravity 1.55; valence 2. See Periodic Table.

Dictionary.com

a silver-white divalent metal, occurring combined in limestone, chalk, gypsum, etc., occurring also in vertebrates and other animals, as a component of bone, skeletal mass, shell, etc., and as a necessary element in nerve conduction, heartbeat, muscle contraction, and many other physiological functions. Symbol: Ca; atomic weight: 40.08; atomic number: 20; specific gravity: 1.55 at 20°C. a malleable silvery-white metallic element of the alkaline earth group; the fifth most abundant element in the earth's crust (3.6 per cent), occurring esp as forms of calcium carbonate. It is an essential constituent of bones and teeth and is used as a deoxidizer in steel. Symbol: Ca; atomic no: 20; atomic wt: 40.078; valency: 2; relative density: 1.55; melting pt: 842±2°C; boiling pt: 1494°C A silvery-white, moderately hard metallic element of the alkaline-earth group that occurs in limestone and gypsum. It is a basic component of leaves, bones, teeth, and shells, and is essential for the normal growth and development of most animals and plants. Calcium is used to make plaster, cement, and alloys. Atomic number 20; atomic weight 40.08; melting point 842 to 848°C; boiling point 1,487°C; specific gravity 1.55; valence 2. See Periodic Table.

Calcium

a chemical element, atomic number 20, atomic weight 40.08. (See Appendix 6.) Calcium is the most abundant mineral in the body. In combination with phosphorus it forms calcium phosphate, the dense, hard material of the bones and teeth. It is an important cation in intracellular and extracellular fluid and is essential to the normal clotting of blood, the maintenance of a normal heartbeat, and the initiation of neuromuscular and metabolic activities. Within the body fluids calcium exists in three forms. Protein-bound calcium accounts for about 47 per cent of the calcium in plasma; most of it in this form is bound to albumin. Another 47 per cent of plasma calcium is ionized. About 6 per cent is complexed with phosphate, citrate, and other anions. Ionized calcium is physiologically active. One of its most important physiological functions is control of the permeability of cell membranes. Parathyroid hormone, which causes transfer of exchangeable calcium from bone into the blood stream, maintains calcium homeostasis by preventing either calcium deficit or excess. chvostek's sign. Dietary sources of calcium include dairy products (such as milk and cheese), soybeans, fortified orange juice, dark green leafy vegetables (such as mustard greens and broccoli), sardines, clams, and oysters. The allowance of calcium for children aged 4 to 8 is 800 mg, and that for women aged 50 to 70 is 1200 mg. (See tables in the Appendices for calcium channel blocker ( calcium channel blocking agent)...