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litmus
[ lit-muhs ]
noun
- a blue coloring matter obtained from certain lichens, especially Roccella tinctoria. In alkaline solution litmus turns blue, in acid solution, red: widely used as a chemical indicator.
litmus
/ ˈ±ôɪ³Ù³¾É™²õ /
noun
- a soluble powder obtained from certain lichens. It turns red under acid conditions and blue under basic conditions and is used as an indicator
litmus
/ ±ôijÙ′³¾É™²õ /
- A colored powder, obtained from certain lichens, that changes to red in an acid solution and to blue in an alkaline solution. Litmus is a mixture of various closely related heterocyclic organic compounds.
- â—† Litmus is typically added to paper to make litmus paper , which can be used to determine whether a solution is basic or acidic by dipping a strip of the paper into the solution and seeing how the paper changes color.
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Notes
The term litmus is often used to refer to a general and simple test: “Your vote on this issue is a litmus test of your political philosophy .â€
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˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of litmus1
1495–1505; earlier lytmos < Old Norse litmosi dye-moss, equivalent to lit- color, dye + mosi moss
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˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of litmus1
C16: perhaps from Scandinavian; compare Old Norse litmosi, from litr dye + mosi moss
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Example Sentences
Examples have not been reviewed.
The provocative images that Mike White leaves viewers to consider provide a litmus test of our own hidden desires and twisted worldviews.
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Vouchers got tied up in the culture war and became a litmus test for which side of the culture war a legislator stands on.
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Each of the points is a litmus test for the viewer.
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It is a litmus test for the ICC's ability to function effectively in an increasingly polarised climate.
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Once the Democratic nominating contest begins, candidates will surely face a litmus test gauging just how fiercely anti-Trump each has been.
From
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