salinize

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English

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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From saline +‎ -ize.

Pronunciation

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Verb

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salinize (third-person singular simple present salinizes, present participle salinizing, simple past and past participle salinized)

  1. (transitive, intransitive) to become or render salty
    • 1920, Henry Asbury Christian & James Mackenzie, The Oxford Medicine, volume 4, part 3, p21 (Oxford University Press, American branch)
      Salinized drinking water probably is the best insurance that the men will take the salt during the working hours of the day. A study from the Inland Steel Company56, in which a section of steel workers, 3,000 men, were given salinized drinking water, 0·1 per cent., showed good results as compared with the control group.
    • 1995, Heddwyn Jones, Plant Gene Transfer and Expression Protocols[1], Humana Press, →ISBN, page 328, →ISBN:
      2. Place the pipets in a drying oven at 180°C. Inject 100 μL of tributylchlorosilane (TBCS) through a port in the top of the oven, and leave to salinize for 30 min. Allow the fumes to disperse, before removing the pipets. Caution: TBCS is harmful, and this procedure should be carried out in a fume hood. Take other precautions as local safety rules require.
    • 1997, Stanley Desmond Smith, Jay Ennis Anderson, Russell K. Monson, Physiological Ecology of North American Desert Plants[2], Springer, →ISBN, page 225, →ISBN:
      The success of Tamarix relates to its ability, as a phreatophyte, to grow rapidly under mesophytic riparian conditions, but then, as a deciduous salt-pumping shrub, to salinize the floodplain ecosystems which it invades.
    • 2004, Dr Michael Mayerfeld Bell & Michael S. Carolan, An Invitation to Environmental Sociology (Second Edition), p14 (Pine Forge Press (SAGE Publications); →ISBN (10), →ISBN (13))
      Soil erosion is only one of many serious threats to farmland. Much of the twentieth century’s gains in crop production was due to irrigation. But irrigation can also salinize soils. Because most irrigation occurs in parched regions, the abundant sunlight of dry climates evaporates much of the water away, leaving salts behind.
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