資料來源 : Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Terra \Ter"ra\, n. [It. & L. See {Terrace}.]
The earth; earth.
{Terra alba} [L., white earth] (Com.), a white amorphous
earthy substance consisting of burnt gypsum, aluminium
silicate (kaolin), or some similar ingredient, as
magnesia. It is sometimes used to adulterate certain
foods, spices, candies, paints, etc.
{Terra cotta}. [It., fr. terra earth + cotta, fem. of cotto
cooked, L. coctus, p. p. of coquere to cook. See {Cook},
n.] Baked clay; a kind of hard pottery used for statues,
architectural decorations, figures, vases, and the like.
{Terr[ae] filius} [L., son of the earth], formerly, one
appointed to write a satirical Latin poem at the public
acts in the University of Oxford; -- not unlike the
prevaricator at Cambridge, England.
{Terra firma} [L.], firm or solid earth, as opposed to
{water}.
{Terra Japonica}. [NL.] Same as {Gambier}. It was formerly
supposed to be a kind of earth from Japan.
{Terra Lemnia} [L., Lemnian earth], Lemnian earth. See under
{Lemnian}.
{Terra ponderosa} [L., ponderous earth] (Min.), barite, or
heavy spar.
{Terra di Sienna}. See {Sienna}.
資料來源 : WordNet®
terra alba
n 1: finely pulverized gypsum used especially as a pigment
2: fine white clay used in making tobacco pipes and pottery and
in whitening leather [syn: {pipeclay}]
3: a fine usually white clay formed by the weathering of
aluminous minerals (as feldspar); used in ceramics and as
an absorbent and as a filler (e.g., in paper) [syn: {china
clay}, {china stone}, {kaolin}, {kaoline}, {porcelain clay}]