Definition
A salt or ester formed from azotic acid (now called nitric acid) in combination with a base.
Etymology
From French 'azote' (nitrogen) + '-ate' (salt suffix), created in the late 18th century when French chemists renamed 'nitrum' as 'azote' and systematized chemical nomenclature.
Kelly Says
An azotate is essentially a nitrate by another name—this old terminology survives in historical chemistry texts and reminds us that even the periodic table's vocabulary is just 200 years old.
Translations
ARالعربية
أ azotate
a-zo-taht
BNবাংলা
অ্যাজোটেট
a-jo-te-et
CSČeština
azotát
a-zo-taht
DEDeutsch
Azotat
ah-zo-taht
ELΕλληνικά
αζωτατ
a-zo-tat
ESEspañol
azotato
ah-soh-tah-toh
FISuomi
azotati
a-zo-ta-ti
FRFrançais
azotate
ah-zo-taht
HIहिन्दी
एज़ोटेट
ay-zo-taet
HUMagyar
azotát
a-zo-taht
IDBahasa Indonesia
azotat
a-zo-taht
ITItaliano
azotato
a-zo-ta-toh
MSBahasa Melayu
azotat
a-zo-taht
MYမြန်မာ
အစိုတပ်
a-so-ta-p
NLNederlands
azotaat
a-zo-taat
PTPortuguês
azotato
ah-zo-tah-toh
RUРусский
азотат
a-zo-tat
SVSvenska
azotat
a-zo-tat
SWKiswahili
azotate
a-zo-taht
TAதமிழ்
அசோட்டேட்
a-so-taet
TEతెలుగు
ఆజోటేట్
a-jo-te-et
TRTürkçe
azotat
ah-zo-tat
UKУкраїнська
азотат
a-zo-tat
VITiếng Việt
azotat
a-zo-taht
ZH中文
亚硝酸盐
yà xiāo suān yán