humic

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

humus +‎ -ic

Pronunciation[edit]

Adjective[edit]

humic

  1. Of or relating to humus (the natural substance, not the food).

Derived terms[edit]

Noun[edit]

humic (plural humics)

  1. A derivative of humic acid.
    • 1996, William C. Becker, Charles R. O'Melia, Optimizing Ozonation for Turbidity and Organics, page 11:
      For waters with low concentrations of aquatic humics, the coagulant dose is controlled not by the humics but by the properties of the coagulant (pH and solubility for metal coagulants).
    • 2005, Irina V. Perminova, Kirk Hatfield, Norbert Hertkorn, Use of Humic Substances to Remediate Polluted Environments, page 16:
      A number of recent publications [] claim previous studies have overestimated the importance of the aromatic moieties present in humics []
    • 2020, Roger S. Wotton, The Biology of Particles in Aquatic Systems, Second Edition:
      Freshwater chemists learned that rather than manipulate large volumes of water through a complex procedure in order to extract a few milligrams of humics or fulvics, a simple adsorption column of certain resins could collect []

Anagrams[edit]

Romanian[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Borrowed from French humique.

Adjective[edit]

humic m or n (feminine singular humică, masculine plural humici, feminine and neuter plural humice)

  1. humic

Declension[edit]