white lead in English

noun
1
a white pigment consisting of a mixture of lead carbonate and lead hydroxide.
The paint room also held linseed oil, as well as the green and blue paint likely used to coat the steam engines, ‘Japan’ varnish, lamp black, coal tar, white lead , cement, and one diamond.
noun
    ceruselead carbonate

Use "white lead" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "white lead" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "white lead", or refer to the context using the word "white lead" in the English Dictionary.

1. A white lead pigment , sometimes used in cosmetics.

2. 5 The original white lead pigments have oxidized and turned black.

3. Buff is a mixture of yellow ocher and white: two parts of white lead and one part of yellow ocher produces a good Buff, or white lead may be tinted with French ochre alone.

4. In 200 B.C., ancient Greek women applied white lead powder and chalk to lighten their skin.

5. 8 Grounds include traditional white lead primer, alkyd primer, acrylic primer, oil emulsion grounds and gesso.

6. It is a nearly complete value study done with one color on a white lead ground.

7. White lead is often wet ground since the poisonous nature of dry dust constitutes a health hazard.

8. - Mersey White Lead Company Ltd formerly also manufactured white lead, but on 1 January 1976 it was taken over by ALM, which is now the only manufacturer left in the UK ; a third UK manufacturer, Novadel, ceased production in 1971;

9. To lighten their complexions, women would paint their face with white lead, which we now nowadays to be toxic and may probably have shortened their lives.

10. Lead could be added directly to a ceramic body in the form of a lead compound in suspension, either from galena (PbS), red lead (Pb3O4), white lead (2PbCO3·Pb(OH)2), or lead oxide (PbO).

11. In 1887 most of the largest white lead Corroders combined to form the National Lead Trust, protecting themselves, paint industry spokesman George Heckel wryly explained, from competition that "had become so keen and its debasing consequences so disturbing to the conscience of moral-minded business men." T