(fe) demir

listen to the pronunciation of (fe) demir
Türkisch - Englisch
(Nükleer Bilimler) iron
A dark shade of the colour/color silver
A male homosexual
Atomic weight 55
Irons are metal-headed clubs used for most shots between tee and green Sometimes you can use them from the tee at holes where accuracy is more important than distance The sand and pitching wedges are also irons
Iron is the most used and cheapest metal, the second most abundant metal and fourth most abundant element in Earth's crust. It occurs rarely as a free metal, occasionally in natural alloys (especially in meteorites), and in hundreds of minerals and ores, including hematite, magnetite, limonite, and siderite. The human body contains about one-sixth of an ounce (4.5 g) of iron, mostly in hemoglobin and its precursors; iron in the diet is essential to health. Iron is ferromagnetic (see ferromagnetism) at ordinary temperatures and is the only metal that can be tempered (see tempering). Its uses in steels of various types, as well as in cast and wrought iron (collectively, "ferrous metals"), are numerous. Alteration of its properties by impurities, especially carbon, is the basis of steelmaking. Iron in compounds usually has valence 2 (ferrous) or 3 (ferric). Ferrous and ferric oxides (FeO and Fe2O3, respectively) are used as pigments and the latter as jewelers' rouge. Rust is ferric oxide containing water; ferric oxide is widely used as a magnetic recording material in computer data-storage devices and magnetic tapes. Ferrous and ferric sulfates and chlorides are all of industrial importance as mordants, reducing agents, flocculating agents, or raw materials and in inks and fertilizers. magnetic iron ore iron pyrite bog iron ore cast iron Iron Act Iron Age Iron Curtain iron deficiency anemia pig iron Saugus Iron Works wrought iron Irons Jeremy
An iron is an electrical device with a flat metal base. You heat it until the base is hot, then rub it over clothes to remove creases
A handgun
metal shackles; for hands or legs
Iron is an essential element found in hemoglobin and myoglobin molecules It is needed for hemoglobin production
To furnish or arm with iron; as, to iron a wagon
A ductile and malleable greyish white metal used in making steel
Iron in water causes the water to be brown- or green-collored Can be controlled by the addition of a sequestering agent or a chelat- ing agent Water can be tested with an iron test kit
Symbol Fe (Latin Ferrum)
a golf club that has a relatively narrow metal head
a mineral, which can occur naturally in water and can be especially high in well water Can lead to staining and discoloration of the water and underwater surfaces Requires treatment with chelating agents Best to treat prior to adding chlorine or raising the pH Testing of the water will determine the concentration in PPM and allow for an appropriate dosage of chelating agents to be added Any measurable amount of iron is capable of causing a problem, if not treated
A metallic chemical element having atomic number 26, and symbol Fe
Shackles
Iron is used in expressions such as an iron hand and iron discipline to describe strong, harsh, or unfair methods of control which do not allow people much freedom. He died in 1985 after ruling Albania with an iron fist for 40 years
implement used to brand live stock
(fe) demir
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