cotton wool - определение. Что такое cotton wool
Diclib.com
Словарь ChatGPT
Введите слово или словосочетание на любом языке 👆
Язык:

Перевод и анализ слов искусственным интеллектом ChatGPT

На этой странице Вы можете получить подробный анализ слова или словосочетания, произведенный с помощью лучшей на сегодняшний день технологии искусственного интеллекта:

  • как употребляется слово
  • частота употребления
  • используется оно чаще в устной или письменной речи
  • варианты перевода слова
  • примеры употребления (несколько фраз с переводом)
  • этимология

Что (кто) такое cotton wool - определение

COTTON FIBRES REFINED INTO A FLUFFY ABSORBANT
  • Cotton wool
Найдено результатов: 652
cotton wool         
2017 FILM DIRECTED BY NICHOLAS CONNOR
Cotton Wool (2017 film); Cotton Wool (2017 Film)
¦ noun
1. Brit. fluffy wadding of a kind originally made from raw cotton, used especially for cleaning the skin or bathing wounds.
2. US raw cotton.
Phrases
wrap someone in cotton wool be overprotective towards someone.
cotton wool         
2017 FILM DIRECTED BY NICHOLAS CONNOR
Cotton Wool (2017 film); Cotton Wool (2017 Film)
Cotton wool is a soft mass of cotton, used especially for applying liquids or creams to your skin. (BRIT; in AM, use cotton
)
N-UNCOUNT
Cotton wool         
2017 FILM DIRECTED BY NICHOLAS CONNOR
Cotton Wool (2017 film); Cotton Wool (2017 Film)
Cotton wool consists of silky fibers taken from cotton plants in their raw state. Impurities, such as seeds, are removed and the cotton is then bleached using hydrogen peroxide or sodium hypochlorite and sterilized.
Cotton wool spots         
  •  doi = 10.1016/j.csbj.2016.10.001 }}</ref>
FLUFFY WHITE PATCHES ON THE RETINA FOUND VIA FUNDUSCOPIC EXAMS
Cotton-wool spots; Soft exudates; Cotton wool spot
Cotton wool spots are opaque fluffy white patches on the retina of the eye that are considered an abnormal finding during a funduscopic exam (also called an ophthalmoscopic exam). Cotton wool spots are typically a sign of another disease state, most common of which is diabetic retinopathy.
mineral wool         
  • Common insulation applications in an [[apartment building]]
  • Mineral wool pipe covering applied to a steel pipe for a [[fire test]]
  • Mineral wool under microscope
FIBER MADE FROM SPUN MOLTEN MINERALS
Mineral cotton; Silicate cotton; Stone wool; Slag wool; Rock wool; Synthetic Mineral Fibre; High-temperature mineral wool; Refractory Ceramic Fibre; Ceramic fiber blanket; Alkaline Earth Silicate; AES Wool; AES fiber; High Temperature Glass Wool; HTIW; Polycrystalline Wool; Alumino Silicate Wool; High temperature insulation wool; Man-made mineral fibres; Rockwool; Ceramic fiber wool; Kaowool; Alkaline earth silicate; High-temperature insulation wool; Ceramic wool
¦ noun a substance resembling matted wool and made from inorganic mineral material, used for packing or insulation.
rock wool         
  • Common insulation applications in an [[apartment building]]
  • Mineral wool pipe covering applied to a steel pipe for a [[fire test]]
  • Mineral wool under microscope
FIBER MADE FROM SPUN MOLTEN MINERALS
Mineral cotton; Silicate cotton; Stone wool; Slag wool; Rock wool; Synthetic Mineral Fibre; High-temperature mineral wool; Refractory Ceramic Fibre; Ceramic fiber blanket; Alkaline Earth Silicate; AES Wool; AES fiber; High Temperature Glass Wool; HTIW; Polycrystalline Wool; Alumino Silicate Wool; High temperature insulation wool; Man-made mineral fibres; Rockwool; Ceramic fiber wool; Kaowool; Alkaline earth silicate; High-temperature insulation wool; Ceramic wool
¦ noun inorganic material made into matted fibre, used especially for insulation or soundproofing.
slag wool         
  • Common insulation applications in an [[apartment building]]
  • Mineral wool pipe covering applied to a steel pipe for a [[fire test]]
  • Mineral wool under microscope
FIBER MADE FROM SPUN MOLTEN MINERALS
Mineral cotton; Silicate cotton; Stone wool; Slag wool; Rock wool; Synthetic Mineral Fibre; High-temperature mineral wool; Refractory Ceramic Fibre; Ceramic fiber blanket; Alkaline Earth Silicate; AES Wool; AES fiber; High Temperature Glass Wool; HTIW; Polycrystalline Wool; Alumino Silicate Wool; High temperature insulation wool; Man-made mineral fibres; Rockwool; Ceramic fiber wool; Kaowool; Alkaline earth silicate; High-temperature insulation wool; Ceramic wool
¦ noun mineral wool made from blast-furnace slag.
cotton bud         
  • Cotton swabs in a round container
  • A pack of 54 Q-tips
SMALL WAD OF COTTON WRAPPED AROUND ONE OR BOTH ENDS OF A SHORT ROD
Q-tip; Q-tips; Q Tip; Q-Tips; Papersticks; Cotton bud; Q-Tip; Cotton swabs; Ear cleaner; Qtip; Q tips; Cotton buds; Cotton wool bud; Baby Gays; Cotton tips; Mouth swab; Cue tip; Queue tip; Surgical swab
¦ noun Brit. a small wad of cotton wool on a short, thin stick, used for cosmetic purposes or for cleaning the ears.
cotton         
  • 1877}}
  • Picking cotton in [[Armenia]] in the 1930s. No cotton is grown there today.
  • Cotton ready for harvest in [[Andhra Pradesh]], [[India]].
  • East Carroll Parish]] in northeastern [[Louisiana]]
  • Offloading freshly harvested cotton into a module builder in [[Texas]]; previously built modules can be seen in the background
  • A [[boll weevil]] on a cotton boll
  • Cotton [[plowing]] in [[Togo]], 1928
  • Cotton fibers viewed under a [[scanning electron microscope]]
  • Manually decontaminating cotton before processing at an Indian spinning mill, in 2010.
  • Worldwide cotton production
  • Female and nymph [[cotton harlequin bug]]
  • A group of Egyptian [[fellah]]s picking cotton by hand
  • Cotton ready for shipment, [[Houston, Texas]] (postcard, circa 1911)
  • [[Cotton bale]]s at the port in [[Bombay]], [[India]], 1860s
  • Cotton field
  • A cotton field, late in the season
  • Cotton modules in Australia (2007)
  • pads]] for applying and removing cosmetics.
  • Cotton being picked by hand in [[India]], 2005
  • Cotton plant with ''[[Ipomoea quamoclit]]'' vine
  • 2020s commodities boom}}
  • Cotton field at Singalandapuram, Rasipuram, India (2017)
  • Espanya Industrial" cotton factory, in Sants, Barcelona in the late 19th century.
  • Hoeing a cotton field to remove weeds, [[Greene County, Georgia]], US, 1941
  • A display from a British cotton manufacturer of items used in a [[cotton mill]] during the [[Industrial Revolution]]
  • Cotton plants as imagined and drawn by [[John Mandeville]] in the 14th century
  • Mehrgarh shown in a physical map of the surrounding region
  • Bengali muslin]], 18th century
  • Cotton in a tree
  • Round cotton modules in Australia (2014)
  • The [[Vegetable Lamb of Tartary]]
  • Slaves using the cotton gin to help harvest and process the cotton.
PLANT FIBER FROM THE GENUS GOSSYPIUM
Cotton Fabric; Processing of Cotton; Absorbent cotton; Cottons; Cotton picking; Cotton linter; Cotton fiber; Cotton cloth; Types of cotton; Asiatic cotton mallow; Cotton Boll; Cotton industry; Manufacture of cotton; Indian Cotton; Cotton planting; Cotton growing; Cottonfield; Cotton textile industry; Genetically modified cotton; GM cotton; World Cotton Day; Cotton textiles; Cotton Industry; Cotton lisle
(cottons, cottoning, cottoned)
Frequency: The word is one of the 3000 most common words in English.
1.
Cotton is a type of cloth made from soft fibres from a particular plant.
...a cotton shirt.
N-MASS: oft N n
2.
Cotton is a plant which is grown in warm countries and which produces soft fibres used in making cotton cloth.
...a large cotton plantation in Tennessee.
N-UNCOUNT
3.
Cotton is thread that is used for sewing, especially thread that is made from cotton. (mainly BRIT; in AM, use thread
)
There's a needle and cotton there.
N-MASS
4.
Cotton or absorbent cotton is a soft mass of cotton, used especially for applying liquids or creams to your skin. (AM; in BRIT, use cotton wool
)
N-UNCOUNT
cotton         
  • 1877}}
  • Picking cotton in [[Armenia]] in the 1930s. No cotton is grown there today.
  • Cotton ready for harvest in [[Andhra Pradesh]], [[India]].
  • East Carroll Parish]] in northeastern [[Louisiana]]
  • Offloading freshly harvested cotton into a module builder in [[Texas]]; previously built modules can be seen in the background
  • A [[boll weevil]] on a cotton boll
  • Cotton [[plowing]] in [[Togo]], 1928
  • Cotton fibers viewed under a [[scanning electron microscope]]
  • Manually decontaminating cotton before processing at an Indian spinning mill, in 2010.
  • Worldwide cotton production
  • Female and nymph [[cotton harlequin bug]]
  • A group of Egyptian [[fellah]]s picking cotton by hand
  • Cotton ready for shipment, [[Houston, Texas]] (postcard, circa 1911)
  • [[Cotton bale]]s at the port in [[Bombay]], [[India]], 1860s
  • Cotton field
  • A cotton field, late in the season
  • Cotton modules in Australia (2007)
  • pads]] for applying and removing cosmetics.
  • Cotton being picked by hand in [[India]], 2005
  • Cotton plant with ''[[Ipomoea quamoclit]]'' vine
  • 2020s commodities boom}}
  • Cotton field at Singalandapuram, Rasipuram, India (2017)
  • Espanya Industrial" cotton factory, in Sants, Barcelona in the late 19th century.
  • Hoeing a cotton field to remove weeds, [[Greene County, Georgia]], US, 1941
  • A display from a British cotton manufacturer of items used in a [[cotton mill]] during the [[Industrial Revolution]]
  • Cotton plants as imagined and drawn by [[John Mandeville]] in the 14th century
  • Mehrgarh shown in a physical map of the surrounding region
  • Bengali muslin]], 18th century
  • Cotton in a tree
  • Round cotton modules in Australia (2014)
  • The [[Vegetable Lamb of Tartary]]
  • Slaves using the cotton gin to help harvest and process the cotton.
PLANT FIBER FROM THE GENUS GOSSYPIUM
Cotton Fabric; Processing of Cotton; Absorbent cotton; Cottons; Cotton picking; Cotton linter; Cotton fiber; Cotton cloth; Types of cotton; Asiatic cotton mallow; Cotton Boll; Cotton industry; Manufacture of cotton; Indian Cotton; Cotton planting; Cotton growing; Cottonfield; Cotton textile industry; Genetically modified cotton; GM cotton; World Cotton Day; Cotton textiles; Cotton Industry; Cotton lisle
n.
Cotton-wool, raw cotton.

Википедия

Cotton wool

Cotton wool consists of silky fibers taken from cotton plants in their raw state. Impurities, such as seeds, are removed and the cotton is then bleached using hydrogen peroxide or sodium hypochlorite and sterilized. It is also a refined product (absorbent cotton in U.S. usage) which has medical, cosmetic and many other practical uses.

The first medical use of cotton wool was by Dr Joseph Sampson Gamgee at the Queen's Hospital (later the General Hospital) in Birmingham, England. Although cotton wool is called cotton wool it is actually not wool at all. It is from the cotton plant. Most cotton comes from India, The United States or, China. Cotton plants prefer heavy soil to grow well. Good locations, such as seasonally dry tropical areas, or subtropics are perfect.