Definitions

from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.

  • noun An ester or a salt of oleic acid.

from The Century Dictionary.

  • noun In medicine, a salve prepared by triturating a metal oxid or an alkaloid with oleic acid, which is generally used in excess. It is a solution of the salt in the excess of acid.
  • noun A salt of oleic acid.

from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.

  • noun (Chem.) A salt of oleic acid. Some oleates, as the oleate of mercury, are used in medicine by way of inunction.

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • noun organic chemistry any salt or ester of oleic acid

Etymologies

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Examples

  • As the boys began eagerly ruining our towels in their attempt to de-oleate the dog, I casually picked up what he'd dropped at my wife's feet, hoping to recover a really swell skipping stone.

    Ned Goldreyer: Slick Trick 2010

  • As the boys began eagerly ruining our towels in their attempt to de-oleate the dog, I casually picked up what he'd dropped at my wife's feet, hoping to recover a really swell skipping stone.

    Ned Goldreyer: Slick Trick 2010

  • The surface of a soapy water is greasy (low surface tension, arrest of the movements of camphor); it is, therefore, covered at least by a similar layer of oleic acid or oleate, as can be shown by analysing a known quantity of soapy water drawn in the form of laminae having a known total surface area (Jean Perrin, Mouquin).

    Jean Baptiste Perrin - Nobel Lecture 1965

  • The black spot corresponding to the maximum possible thinning would, therefore, be a kind of sandwich containing a layer of water molecules against each side of which, and glued to it by their acid groups, parallel molecules of oleic acid or oleate are arranged, the whole forming an anisotropic lamina or liquid crystalline sheet.

    Jean Baptiste Perrin - Nobel Lecture 1965

  • Without indicating here the intermediate stages which I passed through, let us say straightaway that, by observing in the microscope in bright light a small horizontal lamina of a given soapy water (approximately 5 per cent pure alkali oleate), I have seen the discontinuities multiplying of which the black spots were the first example.

    Jean Baptiste Perrin - Nobel Lecture 1965

  • Let me add that I have also been able to obtain such stepped laminae with alkali oleate in glycerol, and also with alkali colophonates and resinates in water.

    Jean Baptiste Perrin - Nobel Lecture 1965

  • From this date he used the oleate only once daily, and discontinued it entirely on the

    The Electric Bath George M. Schweig

  • The fusion of two crystals of ammonium oleate forming a single crystal of larger size has also been observed.

    Popular Science Monthly Oct, Nov, Dec, 1915 — Volume 86 Anonymous

  • I was unable to try sodium stearate directly because of the slight solubility of this substance in cold water or dilute alcohol; but I found that a mixture of sodium oleate and stearate behaved in exactly the same manner as the Castile soap.

    Scientific American Supplement, No. 441, June 14, 1884. Various

  • December 2d I substituted for the ointment a twenty per cent solution of the oleate of mercury, of which he used a drachm morning and evening.

    The Electric Bath George M. Schweig

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