English language

How to pronounce halide in English?

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Type Words
Type of salt
Has types bromide, chloride, fluoride, iodide, tetrahalide

Examples of halide

halide
The halide class includes the fluoride, chloride, bromide and iodide minerals.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Early holograms used silver halide photographic emulsions as the recording medium.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Lanthanum halide nanoparticle scintillators for nuclear radiation detection.
From the sciencedaily.com
Mixes the mercury and rare earths that make metal halide and CFL lamps work.
From the forbes.com
Gases used include, neon, argon, xenon, sodium, metal halide, and mercury.
From the en.wikipedia.org
The most common type of floodlights are metal halide and high pressure sodium lights.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Silver halide film is a slow version of camera film with a robust top coat.
From the en.wikipedia.org
After the bleach, a fixer removes the unexposed undeveloped silver halide.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Silver halide photographic film is being replaced by digital photography.
From the forbes.com
More examples
  • A salt of any halogen acid
  • A halide is a binary compound, of which one part is a halogen atom and the other part is an element or radical that is less electronegative than the halogen, to make a fluoride, chloride, bromide, iodide, or astatide compound. Many salts are halides. ...
  • (halides) a group of minerals (e.g. halite and flourite) that are primarily compounds of the halogen elements: bromine, chlorine, flourine, and iodine
  • (Halides) Compounds which contain a halogen and one other element (e.g., fluorides, chlorides, bromides and iodides).
  • (Halides) Halide minerals are relatively rare in caves, with halite (NaCl) being the most common, but only where halite evaporite rock exists in the overburden and where the climate is (or has been) arid. Halite is known to form seeping water
  • Refers to the monoanionic (one negative charge) form of a halogen atom, specifically, fluoride (F^-), chloride (Cl^-), bromide (Br^-) and iodide (I^-).
  • A compound of a halogen (astatine, bromine, chlorine, fluorine, or iodine) with another element or radical. Dental film emulsion is primarily, about 90 to 99 percent, silver bromide and 1 to 10 percent silver iodide.