borax
English

Borax
Etymology
From Middle English boras, from Anglo-Norman boreis, from Medieval Latin baurach (“borax”), from Arabic بَوْرَق (bawraq), from Middle Persian bwlk' (bōrag), which yielded Persian بوره (bure).
Noun
borax (usually uncountable, plural boraxes or boraces)
- A white or gray/grey crystalline salt, with a slight alkaline taste, used as a flux, in soldering metals, making enamels, fixing colors/colours on porcelain, and as a soap, etc.
- (inorganic chemistry) The sodium salt of boric acid, Na2B4O7, either anhydrous or with 5 or 10 molecules of water of crystallization; sodium tetraborate.
- (sometimes attributive) Cheap or tawdry furniture or other works of industrial design.
- 1977, Harlan Ellison, Jeffty is Five:
- Furniture isn't made to last thirty years or longer because they took a survey and found that young homemakers like to throw their furniture out and bring in all new, color-coded borax every seven years.
Synonyms
- E285 when used as a preservative
Derived terms
Derived terms
- boracic
- borax bead test
- borise, borize
- boron
- poke borax
Translations
crystalline salt
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Verb
borax (third-person singular simple present boraxes, present participle boraxing, simple past and past participle boraxed)
- (transitive) To treat with borax.
Further reading
- David Barthelmy (1997–2024) “Borax”, in Webmineral Mineralogy Database.
- “borax”, in Mindat.org, Hudson Institute of Mineralogy, 2000–2024.
- Jonathon Green (2024) “borax n.1”, in Green’s Dictionary of Slang
- borax at the Free Dictionary
Romanian
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