English
Etymology
From Ancient Greek κηρός (kērós, “wax”) + -ene; a name trademarked in 1854.
Pronunciation
Noun
kerosene (countable and uncountable, plural kerosenes)
- A thin, often colorless or blue or straw-colored petroleum-based fuel, heavier than gasoline/petrol or naphtha but lighter than diesel, used primarily as jet fuel but also for heating and lighting in some remote or impoverished areas.
- Synonyms: paraffin (UK); kero (clipping), lamp oil (often synonymous), coal oil (especially Appalachia)
- Hyponyms: (usually hyponymous) jet fuel, avtur
The kerosene lasted all winter, so the furnace kept us always warm.
2013 August 3, “Yesterday’s fuel”, in The Economist, volume 408, number 8847:The dawn of the oil age was fairly recent. Although the stuff was used to waterproof boats in the Middle East 6,000 years ago, extracting it in earnest began only in 1859 after an oil strike in Pennsylvania. […] It was used to make kerosene, the main fuel for artificial lighting after overfishing led to a shortage of whale blubber. Other liquids produced in the refining process, too unstable or smoky for lamplight, were burned or dumped.
Derived terms
Descendants
Translations
thin, colorless fuel
- Albanian: vajgur (sq) m
- Arabic: كِيرُوسِين m (kīrūsīn)
- Egyptian Arabic: جاز m (gāz)
- Armenian: կերոսին (hy) (kerosin)
- Assamese: কেৰাচিন (kerasin)
- Azerbaijani: kerosin, ağ neft, lampa nefti, ağ nöyüd
- Basque: keroseno (eu)
- Belarusian: га́за f (háza), керасі́н m (kjerasín)
- Bulgarian: кероси́н m (kerosín)
- Burmese: ရေနံဆီ (my) (renamhci)
- Catalan: querosè m
- Chamicuro: kerosina
- Chinese:
- Cantonese: 火水 (yue) (fo2 seoi2)
- Mandarin: 煤油 (zh) (méiyóu), 火油 (zh) (huǒyóu), 燈油 / 灯油 (zh) (dēngyóu)
- Czech: petrolej (cs) m
- Danish: petroleum
- Dhivehi: ކަރާސީނު (karāsīnu)
- Dutch: kerosine (nl) f
- Esperanto: keroseno, petrolo
- Estonian: petrooleum, lambiõli
- Finnish: petroli (fi) (generic), kerosiini (fi) (high quality)
- French: kérosène (fr) m
- Galician: queroseno m
- Georgian: კეროსინი (ḳerosini), ნავთი (navti)
- German: Petroleum (de) n, (aviation) Kerosin (de) n
- Gujarati: ઘાસલેટ (ghāsleṭ)
- Hebrew: קֵרוֹסִין m (kerosin)
- Hindi: मिट्टी का तेल (miṭṭī kā tel), केरोसीन (kerosīn)
- Hungarian: kerozin (hu)
- Hunsrik: Kërosen n
- Icelandic: kerósín
- Indonesian: kerosin (id)
- Irish: ceirisín
- Italian: cherosene (it) m
- Japanese: 灯油 (ja) (とうゆ, tōyu), ケロシン (keroshin)
- Kalmyk: намк (namk)
- Kazakh: керосин (kk) (kerosin)
- Khmer: កាត (km) (kaat)
- Korean: 등유(燈油) (ko) (deung'yu), 케로신 (kerosin)
- Kumyk: нап (nap)
- Kyrgyz: керосин (ky) m (kerosin)
- Lao: ກ້າດ (kāt)
- Latvian: petroleja f
- Lithuanian: žibalas m
- Malay: minyak tanah
- Malayalam: മണ്ണെണ്ണ (ml) (maṇṇeṇṇa)
- Maori: karahīni
- Marathi: केरोसीन n (kerosīn)
- Mongolian: керосин (mn) (kerosin)
- Navajo: akʼahkǫʼ
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: parafin (no) m
- Nynorsk: parafin m
- Persian: نفت سفید (naft-e sefid), نفت (fa) (naft), نفت چراغ (naft-e čerâġ), کروسن (kerosen)
- Polish: nafta (pl) f
- Portuguese: querosene (pt) f
- Punjabi: ਮਿੱਟੀ ਦਾ ਤੇਲ (miṭṭī dā tel)
- Quechua: kirusini
- Romanian: petrol lampant (ro) n, kerosen n
- Russian: кероси́н (ru) m (kerosín)
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Cyrillic: керозин m
- Roman: kerozin (sh) m
- Slovak: petrolej (sk) m
- Slovene: petrolej m
- Spanish: queroseno (es) m, canfín (Costa Rica), keroseno (es) m, kerosene (es) m, kerosén (es) m, kerosín m, kerex m (Ecuador), kerosina f (Latin America)
- Swahili: kerosini (sw)
- Swedish: fotogen (sv) c
- Tagalog: gaas, kerosina
- Tajik: керосин (kerosin)
- Thai: น้ำมันก๊าด (nám-man-gáat), ก๊าด (th) (gáat)
- Turkish: kerosen (tr)
- Turkmen: kerosin
- Ukrainian: гас m (has), кероси́н (uk) m (kerosýn)
- Unami: kolay
- Uzbek: kerosin (uz)
- Vietnamese: dầu hỏa (vi), dầu lửa (vi), kêrôsin
- Yoruba: barafín, kẹrosíìnì
- Zulu: uphalafini
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Portuguese
Noun
kerosene m (plural kerosenes)
- obsolete spelling of querosene
Spanish
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /keɾoˈsene/ [ke.ɾoˈse.ne]
- Rhymes: -ene
- Syllabification: ke‧ro‧se‧ne
Noun
kerosene m (plural kerosenes)
- kerosene
Further reading