View example sentences, synonyms and word forms for Melting.
Melting meaning
Which is melting, dissolving or liquefying. | Given over to strong emotion; tender; aroused; emotional, tearful. | That causes one to melt with emotion; able to make others feel tender and emotional.
Synonyms of Melting
Example sentences (20)
Mark MacKechnie of Melting Pot added: "Everyone at Melting Pot is delighted to be working with the Big Feed crew and also our friends at Mini Manoeuvres.
But low-lying metropolises like Miami Beach are not as concerned about melting taking “many decades, not centuries” as they are concerned about which decade starts the major melting process.
As we see the permafrost is melting, glaciers are melting.
In Antarctica, it's melting, nature is melting,' Cruz said.
Heavy, wet snow, followed by melting will make parking off-street extremely important for this event to ensure storm drains are clear to receive run-off from melting snow.
As the water-saturated sediments of the oceanic African plate were pushed to hotter depths in the earth, the water boiled off and caused the melting point of the upper mantle to drop enough to create partial melting of the rocks.
Because platinum has a higher melting point than most other substances, many impurities can be burned or melted away without melting the platinum.
By using the hard, high-melting point solder first, followed by solders with progressively lower melting points, goldsmiths can assemble complex items with several separate soldered joints.
Combined with its high melting temperature, this makes it the material of choice as a high-performance substitute for the weaker and lower-melting-point polyethylene commonly used in low-cost applications.
Due to positive feedback for melting, the eventual melting of the snow and ice covering most of Earth's surface would require as little as a millennium.
Forsterite has an unusually high melting temperature at atmospheric pressure, almost convert, but the melting temperature of fayalite is much lower (about convert).
From the integral of this peak the enthalpy of melting can be determined, and from its onset the melting temperature.
Geochemical implications of partial melting The degree of partial melting is critical for determining what type of magma is produced.
Melting point measurements main Kofler bench with samples for calibration Many laboratory techniques exist for the determination of melting points.
Sources Partial melting Melting of solid rocks to form magma is controlled by three physical parameters: temperature, pressure, and composition.
The higher the quantity of other components, the lower the melting point and the broader will be the melting point range, often referred to as the "pasty range".
The melting point of thoria is 3300 °C – the highest of all known oxides; only few substances have higher melting points.
The melting temperature is different from the gelling temperature, depending on the sources, agarose gel has a gelling temperature of 35-42 °C and a melting temperature of 85-95 °C.
This phase separation occurs because the mainly nonpolar, low melting soft segments are incompatible with the polar, high melting hard segments.
Thus, trans alkenes, which are less polar and more symmetrical, have lower boiling points and higher melting points, and cis alkenes, which are generally more polar and less symmetrical, have higher boiling points and lower melting points.