“Many of these terms were in common use into the 20th century.”

I hear many of these terms in common usage today, like potash, tartar, spirits, soda/soda ash, lime, soda lime, slacked lime, quicklime, lye, alkali, caustic soda, caustic potash, caustic alkali, quicksilver, chalk, cinnabar, fools gold, fulminating silver, fulminating gold, gypsum, vitriol has taken on a less specific meaning, aqua regia, turpentines, lead sugar, sulfur.

I think the reason that so many of these terms are retained is that the substances they refer to have been known for thousands of years in some cases.

brimstone is a much cooler name for sulfur that should be brought back. aqua vitae is a nice name for ethanol. the names of metals haven’t changed.

No comments yet!

A Series of Tubes

!series_of_tubes@sullen.social

Create post

For posting videos, papers, and blog posts covering:

  • interesting projects
  • makes-you-think philosophy stuff
  • engineering/research techniques that blow your mind
  • obscure but fascinating phenomena
  • amateur/diy engineering and science

Leave a short description on your post. What about your link excites you?

Do not post things that are too:

  • Pop sciency/surface level/unsubstantial
  • repeat posts, within the last month

or they may be removed.

Encouraged kinds of links are:

Use Archive.org to keep the most interesting material on the internet safe.

Community stats

  • 1

    Monthly active users

  • 48

    Posts

  • 0

    Comments

Community moderators