CONJUGATION OF THE VERB TO CHLORIDISE
PRESENT
Present
I chloridise
you chloridise
he/she/it chloridises
we chloridise
you chloridise
they chloridise
Present continuous
I am chloridising
you are chloridising
he/she/it is chloridising
we are chloridising
you are chloridising
they are chloridising
Present perfect
I have chloridised
you have chloridised
he/she/it has chloridised
we have chloridised
you have chloridised
they have chloridised
Present perfect continuous
I have been chloridising
you have been chloridising
he/she/it has been chloridising
we have been chloridising
you have been chloridising
they have been chloridising
Present tense is used to refer to circumstances that exist at the present time or over a period that includes the present time. The
present perfect refers to past events, although it can be considered to denote primarily the resulting present situation rather than the events themselves.
PAST
Past
I chloridised
you chloridised
he/she/it chloridised
we chloridised
you chloridised
they chloridised
Past continuous
I was chloridising
you were chloridising
he/she/it was chloridising
we were chloridising
you were chloridising
they were chloridising
Past perfect
I had chloridised
you had chloridised
he/she/it had chloridised
we had chloridised
you had chloridised
they had chloridised
Past perfect continuous
I had been chloridising
you had been chloridising
he/she/it had been chloridising
we had been chloridising
you had been chloridising
they had been chloridising
Past tense forms express circumstances existing at some time in the past,
FUTURE
Future
I will chloridise
you will chloridise
he/she/it will chloridise
we will chloridise
you will chloridise
they will chloridise
Future continuous
I will be chloridising
you will be chloridising
he/she/it will be chloridising
we will be chloridising
you will be chloridising
they will be chloridising
Future perfect
I will have chloridised
you will have chloridised
he/she/it will have chloridised
we will have chloridised
you will have chloridised
they will have chloridised
Future perfect continuous
I will have been chloridising
you will have been chloridising
he/she/it will have been chloridising
we will have been chloridising
you will have been chloridising
they will have been chloridising
The
future is used to express circumstances that will occur at a later time.
CONDITIONAL
Conditional
I would chloridise
you would chloridise
he/she/it would chloridise
we would chloridise
you would chloridise
they would chloridise
Conditional continuous
I would be chloridising
you would be chloridising
he/she/it would be chloridising
we would be chloridising
you would be chloridising
they would be chloridising
Conditional perfect
I would have chloridise
you would have chloridise
he/she/it would have chloridise
we would have chloridise
you would have chloridise
they would have chloridise
Conditional perfect continuous
I would have been chloridising
you would have been chloridising
he/she/it would have been chloridising
we would have been chloridising
you would have been chloridising
they would have been chloridising
Conditional or "future-in-the-past" tense refers to hypothetical or possible actions.
IMPERATIVE
Imperative
you chloridise
we let´s chloridise
you chloridise
The
imperative is used to form commands or requests.
NONFINITE VERB FORMS
Past participle
chloridised
Present Participle
chloridising
Infinitive shows the action beyond temporal perspective. The
present participle or gerund shows the action during the session. The
past participle shows the action after completion.
10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «CHLORIDISE»
Discover the use of
chloridise in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
chloridise and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
the chemist: a monthly journal of chemical philosophy, and ...
... it is preferable to heat it with pure potassa in the air, or to chloridise it slightly ;
this operation gives a brownish precipitate, passing to a brown blnch, and
constituting the sesquioxide of manganese, which will be easily weighed after
washing.
john and charles watt, 1851
2
Prospectus and By-laws, Map, Scientific Reports, Letters, ...
... process than smelting. The bullion is not as fine as I would like to have it made,
owing to the fact that we used 22% per cent. of salt in order to chloridise the silver
up to the highest possible point, (10. per cent. is the usual allowance). 6.
Defiance Silver Mining Company of Colorado, 1869
3
British Abstracts: Applied chemistry
FeCl3 and the mixture is dried and heated in air at 300° to decompose FeCl3 and
to chloridise the Zn. (h) In applying the chloridising processes described above to
Zn ores containing cassiterite, the vapours (II) from the chloridising step ...
... Oars, TREATING. H. J. E. Hamilton, William Street, North Broken Hill, New
South Wales. International Convention date, October 8, 1919. The ore is roasted
in contact with air with an alkali chloride to about 400°C. to chloridise the lead ...
5
The Metallurgy of Lead & Silver: Lead.- pt.II. Silver
Pyritic ores, and others which decrepitate on heating, will chloridise well if
crushed only to 16 mesh, and when the silver-bearing mineral is brittle even a
coarser mesh will sometimes serve; but ores which are dense and do not
decrepitate, ...
Henry Francis Collins, 1900
... by roasting may be mixed with an oxidising agent such as a permanganate or
manganese dioxide, and then treated with a saturated alkali chloride solution
which has also been saturated with sulphur dioxide to chloridise the metallic
oxide.
Clean the wire by sequential sonication in chloroform, acetone and deionised
water. • Chloridise about 2cm of the wire by making it the anode in a cell using a
silver or platinum counter electrode in 0.1M HCl. The current density should be ...
M. Yacoub, Guang-Zhong Yang, 2007
8
Laboratory Instructions in Assaying and Practical Chemistry
A small sample of silver ore can be chloridise roasted in a muffle. Mix the ore with
say 8% of salt and 2% of ferrous sulphate, if the ore is deficient in sulphides.
Spread over the bottom of the muffle in a thin layer. Then rake up into narrow
ridges ...
9
The Hydro-metallurgy of Copper: Being an Account of ...
The object in the calcination is to oxidise sulphur and chloridise the silver and
copper (or rather to render all the copper soluble with the least possible
expenditure of acid in leaching). About 77 per cent. of the calcined ore is soluble
in water ...
10
Economic Mining: A Practical Handbook for the Miner, the ...
Such waters are well adapted for moistening ore heaps. Sometimes about 1 per
cent. of salt is added to the heaps, to hasten oxidation, render the copper more
soluble, and chloridise small traces of silver ; heat aids the operation very much.
Charles George Warnford Lock, 1895