azote

Etymology
Borrowed from, from +. Named by French chemist and biologist, who saw it as the part of air which cannot sustain life.

Noun

 * 1)  nitrogen.
 * 2) * 1823, Chemistry, entry in Charles Maclaren (chief editor), Encyclopædia Britannica, 6th Edition, page 366,
 * Hence it is obvious that deutoxide of azote is a compound of one volume of azote and one volume of oxygen gas united together, without any alteration of volume, consequently its specific gravity is the mean of that of oxygen and azotic gases.It is composed, by weight, of azote 0.9722 or 1.75, oxygen 1.1111 or 2. If we reckon the atomic weight of azote 1.75, this gas is obviously a compound of one atom azote and two atoms oxygen.
 * 1) * 1823, Chemistry, entry in Charles Maclaren (chief editor), Encyclopædia Britannica, 6th Edition, page 366,
 * Hence it is obvious that deutoxide of azote is a compound of one volume of azote and one volume of oxygen gas united together, without any alteration of volume, consequently its specific gravity is the mean of that of oxygen and azotic gases.It is composed, by weight, of azote 0.9722 or 1.75, oxygen 1.1111 or 2. If we reckon the atomic weight of azote 1.75, this gas is obviously a compound of one atom azote and two atoms oxygen.

Etymology
From +,.

Noun

 * 1) nitrogen

Noun

 * 1) bosom

Etymology 1
. Compare 🇨🇬.

Noun

 * 1) whip, lash, scourge multi-tailed whip, especially when used by flagellants for mortification of the sinful flesh
 * 2)  lash stroke with a whip
 * 3)  spanking, licking, thrashing severe beating
 * 4) calamity, scourge event that causes great trouble and suffering, such as pestilence
 * 1)  spanking, licking, thrashing severe beating
 * 2) calamity, scourge event that causes great trouble and suffering, such as pestilence