simulant

English

Etymology

From simulate +‎ -ant.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈsɪmjʊlənt/

Noun

simulant (plural simulants)

  1. 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

Adjective

simulant (not comparable)

  1. (chiefly biology) Simulating, replacing, or having the form or appearance of something else.

Translations

Anagrams

Catalan

Verb

simulant

  1. gerund of simular

Czech

Noun

simulant m anim

  1. malingerer

Declension

French

Participle

simulant

  1. present participle of simuler

Latin

Verb

simulant

  1. third-person plural present active indicative of simulō

Swedish

Etymology

Borrowed from Latin simulant

Noun

simulant c

  1. person simulating
  2. (military) person faking illness

Declension

Declension of simulant
nominative genitive
singular indefinite simulant simulants
definite simulanten simulantens
plural indefinite simulanter simulanters
definite simulanterna simulanternas

References