educt
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Compare educe, induct, Latin eductor (“tutor”).
Noun
[edit]educt (plural educts)
Verb
[edit]educt (third-person singular simple present educts, present participle educting, simple past and past participle educted)
- (engineering) To educe, to extract.
- 1878, W. J. Macquorn Rankine, Morton's Jet Condenser, John Bourne (author & editor), Examples of Steam, Air, & Gas Engines of the Most Recent Approved Types, Longmans, Green and Co., Appendix, page xlix,
- In my 'Hand Book of the Steam Engine,' published in 1865, I pointed out that a feat more difficult than that of forcing the waste water out of the condenser might be performed by the educted steam, whether proceeding to the atmosphere or the condenser.
- 1960, Engineering Extension Series, Issue 145, Purdue University, Department of Engineering Extension, page 260,
- From this tank the carbon is educted with high pressure water to the dewatering screw above the regeneration furnace.
- 1980, Marshall Sittig, Metal and Inorganic Waste Reclaiming Encyclopedia, Noyes Data Corporation, page 271,
- To accomplish this, a preferred means is to provide an eductor 27 which has the line 28 communicating therewith and the educting fluid preferably is the vaporized hydrocarbon discharged […] .
- 1878, W. J. Macquorn Rankine, Morton's Jet Condenser, John Bourne (author & editor), Examples of Steam, Air, & Gas Engines of the Most Recent Approved Types, Longmans, Green and Co., Appendix, page xlix,