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- -ine abstract "-ine is a suffix used in chemistry to denote two kinds of substance. The first is a chemically basic and alkaloidal substance. It was proposed by Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac in an editorial accompanying a paper by Friedrich Sertürner describing the isolation of the alkaloid \"morphium\", which was subsequently renamed to \"morphine\". Examples include quinine, morphine and guanidine. The second usage is to denote a hydrocarbon of the second degree of unsaturation. Examples include hexine and heptine. With simple hydrocarbons, this usage is identical to the IUPAC suffix -yne.The suffix is usually pronounced either /iːn/ or /ɪn/ depending on the word it appears in and the accent of the speaker. In a few words (for example, quinine and strychnine), the /aɪn/ sound is normal in some accents. Gasoline ends with /iːn/; glycerine more often with /ɪn/ than with /iːn/.The suffix -in (/ɪn/) is etymologically related and overlaps in usage with -ine. Many proteins and lipids have names ending with -in: for example, the enzymes pepsin and trypsin, the hormones insulin and gastrin, and the lipids stearin (stearine) and olein.".
- -ine wikiPageID "11662962".
- -ine wikiPageLength "2002".
- -ine wikiPageOutDegree "33".
- -ine wikiPageRevisionID "707840361".
- -ine wikiPageWikiLink -yne.
- -ine wikiPageWikiLink Accent_(sociolinguistics).
- -ine wikiPageWikiLink Alkaloid.
- -ine wikiPageWikiLink Base_(chemistry).
- -ine wikiPageWikiLink Category:Chemistry_suffixes.
- -ine wikiPageWikiLink Chemical_substance.
- -ine wikiPageWikiLink Chemistry.
- -ine wikiPageWikiLink Degree_of_unsaturation.
- -ine wikiPageWikiLink Etymology.
- -ine wikiPageWikiLink Friedrich_Sertürner.
- -ine wikiPageWikiLink Gasoline.
- -ine wikiPageWikiLink Gastrin.
- -ine wikiPageWikiLink Glycerol.
- -ine wikiPageWikiLink Guanidine.
- -ine wikiPageWikiLink Heptyne.
- -ine wikiPageWikiLink Hexyne.
- -ine wikiPageWikiLink Hydrocarbon.
- -ine wikiPageWikiLink IUPAC_nomenclature_of_organic_chemistry.
- -ine wikiPageWikiLink Insulin.
- -ine wikiPageWikiLink Joseph_Louis_Gay-Lussac.
- -ine wikiPageWikiLink Lipid.
- -ine wikiPageWikiLink Morphine.
- -ine wikiPageWikiLink Pepsin.
- -ine wikiPageWikiLink Protein.
- -ine wikiPageWikiLink Quinine.
- -ine wikiPageWikiLink Semantic_field.
- -ine wikiPageWikiLink Stearin.
- -ine wikiPageWikiLink Strychnine.
- -ine wikiPageWikiLink Suffix.
- -ine wikiPageWikiLink Triolein.
- -ine wikiPageWikiLink Trypsin.
- -ine wikiPageWikiLink Wikt:-in.
- -ine wikiPageWikiLinkText "-ine".
- -ine wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:IPAc-en.
- -ine wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Orgchemsuffixes.
- -ine wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- -ine subject Category:Chemistry_suffixes.
- -ine hypernym Suffix.
- -ine type Suffix.
- -ine comment "-ine is a suffix used in chemistry to denote two kinds of substance. The first is a chemically basic and alkaloidal substance. It was proposed by Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac in an editorial accompanying a paper by Friedrich Sertürner describing the isolation of the alkaloid \"morphium\", which was subsequently renamed to \"morphine\". Examples include quinine, morphine and guanidine. The second usage is to denote a hydrocarbon of the second degree of unsaturation. Examples include hexine and heptine.".
- -ine label "-ine".
- -ine sameAs Q158636.
- -ine sameAs -in.
- -ine sameAs イネ_(化学).
- -ine sameAs -ine.
- -ine sameAs -ine.
- -ine sameAs Q158636.
- -ine wasDerivedFrom -ine?oldid=707840361.
- -ine isPrimaryTopicOf -ine.