Definition
An alloy or type of brass containing copper and tin, used to make durable metal objects like bearings and gears.
Etymology
From bronze (a copper-tin alloy) plus the suffix -ine, indicating a substance or material. The root 'bronze' likely comes from Italian 'bronzo,' possibly from Persian origins. The -ine suffix denotes a chemical compound or material type.
Kelly Says
Bronzine was crucial to the Industrial Revolution—it's still used in machinery bearings today because it can handle extreme friction and temperature changes better than pure metals, making it a 'super alloy' that engineers still rely on.
Translations
ARالعربية
برونزية
burun-ziyyah
BNবাংলা
ব্রোঞ্জিন
bro-njin
CACatalà
bronzina
bron-zi-nah
CSČeština
bronzin
bron-zin
DEDeutsch
Bronzine
brohn-zihn-eh
ELΕλληνικά
μπρονζίνη
mpron-zi-nee
ESEspañol
bronzina
bron-zee-nah
FISuomi
bronzine
bron-ziin-eh
FRFrançais
bronzine
bronz-een
GUGU
બ્રોન્ઝીન
bro-nzi-in
HIहिन्दी
ब्रोंजीन
bron-jeen
HUMagyar
bronzin
bron-zin
IDBahasa Indonesia
bronzine
bron-ziin
ITItaliano
bronzina
bron-zi-nah
MSBahasa Melayu
bronzin
bron-zin
NLNederlands
bronzine
bron-ziin
PLPolski
bronzina
bron-zi-nah
PTPortuguês
bronzina
bron-zih-nah
RORomână
bronzină
bron-zih-nah
RUРусский
бронзина
bron-zi-na
SVSvenska
bronzin
bron-zin
SWKiswahili
bronzine
bron-ziin
TEతెలుగు
బ్రాంజిన్
bra-njin
TRTürkçe
bronzin
bron-zin
UKУкраїнська
бронзина
bron-zi-na
VITiếng Việt
bronzine
bron-zin