simulant
English
Etymology
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈsɪmjʊlənt/
Noun
simulant (plural simulants)
- Something that simulates something else such as a gemstone.
- Due to its low cost and close visual likeness to diamond, cubic zirconia has remained the most gemologically and economically important diamond simulant since 1976.
- 2012, Joshua Cohen, Four New Messages:
- He could invent a fictional restaurant for you to bite your burger at but any fictional restaurant would be, like Nomenex, a worthless simulant or inconcinne imitation, a placebic generic.
- 2023 April 25, Dhananjay Khadilkar, “Why scientists are making fake Moon dust”, in BBC[1]:
- The soil sample, called LZS-1, is the latest in a list of lunar regolith simulants of varying quality that have been developed to help Nasa and other space agencies around the world prepare for missions to the Moon.
Translations
Translations
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Adjective
simulant (not comparable)
- (chiefly biology) Simulating, replacing, or having the form or appearance of something else.
Translations
Translations
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Anagrams
Catalan
Verb
simulant
- gerund of simular
Czech
Noun
simulant m anim
Declension
Declension of simulant (hard masculine animate)
singular | plural | |
---|---|---|
nominative | simulant | simulanti |
genitive | simulanta | simulantů |
dative | simulantovi, simulantu | simulantům |
accusative | simulanta | simulanty |
vocative | simulante | simulanti |
locative | simulantovi, simulantu | simulantech |
instrumental | simulantem | simulanty |
French
Participle
simulant
- present participle of simuler
Latin
Verb
simulant
- third-person plural present active indicative of simulō
Swedish
Etymology
Noun
simulant c
Declension
nominative | genitive | ||
---|---|---|---|
singular | indefinite | simulant | simulants |
definite | simulanten | simulantens | |
plural | indefinite | simulanter | simulanters |
definite | simulanterna | simulanternas |