carbon
Dutch (Brabantic)
/kɑrˈbɔn/
noun
Definitions
- fibre-reinforced polymer
- black diamond
Etymology
Borrowed from French carbone (carbon) derived from Latin carbō (charcoal, coal) derived from English carbon.
Origin
English
carbon
Gloss
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- anticarbon English
- biocarbon English
- carbon English
- carbonaceous English
- carbonian English
- carbonic English
- carbonide English
- carboniferous English
- carbonific English
- carbonification English
- carbonify English
- carbonigenous English
- carbonise English
- carbonite English
- carbonization English
- carbonize English
- carbonless English
- carbonlike English
- carbonometer English
- carbonous English
- carbonyl English
- carbonæmia English
- chlorocarbon English
- cyanocarbon English
- dicarbon English
- ferrocarbon English
- fluorocarbon English
- halocarbon English
- hydrobromofluorocarbon English
- hydrocarbon English
- intercarbon English
- multi-carbon English
- nanocarbon English
- nitrocarbol English
- nitrocarbon English
- noncarbon English
- organocarbon English
- oxocarbon English
- perfluorocarbon English
- petrocarbon English
- polycarbon English
- pyrocarbon English
- radiocarbon English
- tetracarbon English
- Carbonaria Latin
- carbo Latin
- carbo, carbōnem, carbō Latin
- carbonarius Latin
- carbonatem Latin
- carbonicus Latin
- carbunculus Latin
- carbō Latin
- carbōnem Latin
- carbōnem, carbō Latin
- carbonata Italian
- carbonzuur Dutch, Flemish
- zuur Dutch, Flemish
- carbone French
- carboner French
- carboneux French
- carbonomètre French
- carbono Spanish, Castilian
- *ker- Proto-Indo-European
- carbono Portuguese
- carbón Irish
- carbó Catalan, Valencian
- carbono Galician
- carbon Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- คาร์บอน Thai
- carbon Welsh
- karbon Turkish
- కర్బనము Telugu
- cacbon Vietnamese
- karbon Malay
- kaboni Swahili
- carbonada Occitan
- ការបោន Central Khmer
- ikhabhoni Xhosa
- káábin Navajo, Navaho
- kaboni Lingala