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minium orange, violet, ochre (rust/ orange-red color, vermilion, rust [IW] | minium orange, violet, ochre (rust/ orange-red color, vermilion, rust [IW] | ||
(med) Minium, Red lead, Pb<sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub>. One of the oldest artificial pigments (through calcination of white lead or ceruse, PbCO<sub>3</sub>) in order to imitate cinnabar. Occurs naturally as a rare secondary alteration mineral. At the roman time the name minium was given to cinnabar (mercury sulfide, adulterated with red lead), later on in the Middle Age to ceruse, and finally to red lead. Thence the frequent confusion with minium between cinnabar, vermillion (artificial cinnabar), red lead and litharge. Litharge, PbO, is another red lead oxide. It is found naturally and extracted e.g. in modern mines in Tibet, but is known since the antiquity as a by-product of the separation of lead and silver by fire metallurgy. Another natural lead oxide is Massicot, PbO, a yellow dimorph of litharge (see gser zil). It appears as alteration product of lead minerals. (Drungtso 1999, mindat.org, Phrin Las 1987, Yeshi 2018) | (med) Minium, Red lead, Pb<sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub>. One of the oldest artificial pigments (through calcination of white lead or ceruse, PbCO<sub>3</sub>) in order to imitate cinnabar. Occurs naturally as a rare secondary alteration mineral. At the roman time the name minium was given to cinnabar (mercury sulfide, adulterated with red lead), later on in the Middle Age to ceruse, and finally to red lead. Thence the frequent confusion with minium between cinnabar, vermillion (artificial cinnabar), red lead and litharge. Litharge, PbO, is another red lead oxide. It is found naturally and extracted e.g. in modern mines in Tibet, but is known since the antiquity as a by-product of the separation of lead and silver by fire metallurgy. Another natural lead oxide is Massicot, PbO, a yellow dimorph of litharge (see gser zil). It appears as alteration product of lead minerals. (Drungtso 1999, mindat.org, Phrin Las 1987, Yeshi 2018) [[User:Johannes Schmidt|Johannes Schmidt]] ([[User talk:Johannes Schmidt|talk]]) 20:47, 20 November 2021 (UTC) | ||
[[Category:Tibetan Dictionary]] [[Category:rydic2003]] [[Category:la]] | [[Category:Tibetan Dictionary]] [[Category:rydic2003]] [[Category:la]] |
Revision as of 15:47, 20 November 2021
This is the RYI Dictionary content as presented on the site http://rywiki.tsadra.org/, which is being changed fundamentally and will become hard to use within the GoldenDict application. If you are using GoldenDict, please either download and import the rydic2003 file from DigitalTibetan (WayBack Machine version as the site was shut down in November 2021).
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ལི་ཁྲི
ལི་ཁྲི།
1) orange/ sindhura color [IW]
vermilion; minium orange, violet, ochre [rust, orange-red color] [RY]
vermillion, light red lead violet, ocher, red-lead, orange-colored powder, mineral, sindhura used for the color red, orange-red [JV]
minium orange, violet, ochre (rust/ orange-red color, vermilion, rust [IW]
(med) Minium, Red lead, Pb3O4. One of the oldest artificial pigments (through calcination of white lead or ceruse, PbCO3) in order to imitate cinnabar. Occurs naturally as a rare secondary alteration mineral. At the roman time the name minium was given to cinnabar (mercury sulfide, adulterated with red lead), later on in the Middle Age to ceruse, and finally to red lead. Thence the frequent confusion with minium between cinnabar, vermillion (artificial cinnabar), red lead and litharge. Litharge, PbO, is another red lead oxide. It is found naturally and extracted e.g. in modern mines in Tibet, but is known since the antiquity as a by-product of the separation of lead and silver by fire metallurgy. Another natural lead oxide is Massicot, PbO, a yellow dimorph of litharge (see gser zil). It appears as alteration product of lead minerals. (Drungtso 1999, mindat.org, Phrin Las 1987, Yeshi 2018) Johannes Schmidt (talk) 20:47, 20 November 2021 (UTC)