What is the name meaning of SODI. Phrases containing SODI
See name meanings and uses of SODI!SODI
SODI
SODI
Surname or Lastname
English
English : of unknown etymology. It looks like a habitational name, but no place of this name is known in Britain. The proposed etymology from an Old English personal name, Higbert, is equally doubtful.The name was brought to North America in the 1640s from Ivinghoe in Buckinghamshire, England.
Girl/Female
Hindu
Name of a Raga
Girl/Female
Welsh
Brave.
Girl/Female
Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Punjabi, Sanskrit, Sikh
Light of Heart; Light of Mind
Girl/Female
Indian
Boy/Male
Tamil
Youth, Lord Murugan
Boy/Male
Indian, Punjabi, Sikh
Having Knowledge of Guru's Word
Boy/Male
Hindu
King of the Sky, An Angel from the heavens, The Sky
Girl/Female
Indian
Strong
Boy/Male
English American French Teutonic
Lives near the wood.
SODI
SODI
SODI
SODI
SODI
n.
A metallic salt; esp., a salt of potassium, sodium, lithium, or magnesium, used in medicine.
a.
Pertaining to, derived from, or designating, an acid formerly obtained by fusing salicin with potassium hydroxide, and now made in large quantities from phenol (carbolic acid) by the action of carbon dioxide on heated sodium phenolate. It is a white crystalline substance. It is used as an antiseptic, and in its salts in the treatment of rheumatism. Called also hydroxybenzoic acid.
n.
A salt of taurocholic acid; as, sodium taurocholate, which occurs in human bile.
n.
A common metallic element of the alkali group, in nature always occuring combined, as in common salt, in albite, etc. It is isolated as a soft, waxy, white, unstable metal, so readily oxidized that it combines violently with water, and to be preserved must be kept under petroleum or some similar liquid. Sodium is used combined in many salts, in the free state as a reducer, and as a means of obtaining other metals (as magnesium and aluminium) is an important commercial product. Symbol Na (Natrium). Atomic weight 23. Specific gravity 0.97.
n.
A blue pigment formerly obtained by powdering lapis lazuli, but now produced in large quantities by fusing together silica, alumina, soda, and sulphur, thus forming a glass, colored blue by the sodium polysulphides made in the fusion. Also used adjectively.
n.
A compound of thymol analogous to a salt; as, sodium thymate.
n.
Aerated salt; a white crystalline substance having an alkaline taste and reaction, consisting of sodium bicarbonate (see under Sodium.) It is largely used in cooking, with sour milk (lactic acid) or cream of tartar as a substitute for yeast. It is also an ingredient of most baking powders, and is used in the preparation of effervescing drinks.
n.
One of the mineral concretions about the joints, and in other situations, occurring chiefly in gouty persons. They consist usually of urate of sodium; when occurring in the internal organs they are also composed of phosphate of calcium.
n.
A red dyestuff, used as a substitute for cochineal, archil, etc. It consists of the sodium salt of a complex azo derivative of naphtol.
n.
A salt of uric acid; as, sodium urate; ammonium urate.
n.
The chloride of sodium, a substance used for seasoning food, for the preservation of meat, etc. It is found native in the earth, and is also produced, by evaporation and crystallization, from sea water and other water impregnated with saline particles.
n.
The degree of combining power of an atom (or radical) as shown by the number of atoms of hydrogen (or of other monads, as chlorine, sodium, etc.) with which it will combine, or for which it can be substituted, or with which it can be compared; thus, an atom of hydrogen is a monad, and has a valence of one; the atoms of oxygen, nitrogen, and carbon are respectively dyads, triads, and tetrads, and have a valence respectively of two, three, and four.
n.
Anhydrous sodium sulphate, a mineral of a white or brown color and vitreous luster.
a.
Containing, or consisting of, three different parts, as elements, atoms, groups, or radicals, which are regarded as having different functions or relations in the molecule; thus, sodic hydroxide, NaOH, is a ternary compound.
n.
A fluoride of aluminium, calcium, and sodium occurring with the cryolite of Greenland.
a.
Of or pertaining to sodium; containing sodium.
n.
A native double salt, consisting of a combination of neutral and acid sodium carbonate, Na2CO3.2HNaCO3.2H2O, occurring as a white crystalline fibrous deposit from certain soda brine springs and lakes; -- called also urao, and by the ancients nitrum.