Charcoal /(?)/
Char·coal
Charcoal
n.
- Impure carbon prepared from vegetable or animal substances; esp., coal made by charring wood in a kiln, retort, etc., from which air is excluded. It is used for fuel and in various mechanical, artistic, and chemical processes.
- Finely prepared charcoal in small sticks, used as a drawing implement. (Fine Arts)
Phrases & Compounds
- Animal charcoal
- a fine charcoal prepared by calcining bones in a closed vessel; -- used as a filtering agent in sugar refining, and as an absorbent and disinfectant.
- Charcoal blacks
- the black pigment, consisting of burnt ivory, bone, cock, peach stones, and other substances.
- Charcoal drawing
- a drawing made with charcoal. See Charcoal, 2. Until within a few years this material has been used almost exclusively for preliminary outline, etc., but at present many finished drawings are made with it.
- Charcoal point
- a carbon pencil prepared for use in an electric light apparatus.
- Mineral charcoal
- a term applied to silky fibrous layers of charcoal, interlaminated in beds of ordinary bituminous coal; -- known to miners as mother of coal.