Th


Symbol, Chemistry.

Definition for th (2 of 6)

-th 1

a suffix forming nouns of action (birth) or abstract nouns denoting quality or condition (depth; length; warmth).

Origin of -th

1
Middle English -th(e), Old English -thu, -tho, -th (variant -t after a velar, f, or s); cognate with Gothic -itha, Latin -tus, Greek -tos

Definition for th (3 of 6)

-th 2

a suffix used in the formation of ordinal numbers (fourth, tenth), in some cases, added to altered stems of the cardinal (fifth; twelfth).

Origin of -th

2
Middle English -the, -te, Old English -tha, -the (variant -ta after f or s); cognate with Old Norse -thi, -di, Latin -tus, Greek -tos; see -eth2

Definition for th (4 of 6)

-th 3

variant of -eth1: doth.

Definition for th (5 of 6)

Th.

Definition for th (6 of 6)

T.H.

Territory of Hawaii.

Example sentences from the Web for th

British Dictionary definitions for th (1 of 4)

th

the internet domain name for

Thailand

British Dictionary definitions for th (2 of 4)

Th

the chemical symbol for

thorium

British Dictionary definitions for th (3 of 4)

-th 1

suffix forming nouns

(from verbs) indicating an action or its consequence growth
(from adjectives) indicating a quality width

Word Origin for -th

from Old English -thu, -tho

British Dictionary definitions for th (4 of 4)

-th 2

-eth


suffix

forming ordinal numbers fourth; thousandth

Word Origin for -th

from Old English -( o) tha, -( o) the

Medical definitions for th

Th

The symbol for the elementthorium

Scientific definitions for th (1 of 2)

Th

The symbol for thorium.

Scientific definitions for th (2 of 2)

thorium
[ thôrē-əm ]

Th

A silvery-white, radioactive metallic element of the actinide series. It is used for fuel in some nuclear reactors and for improving the high-temperature strength of magnesium alloys. The only naturally occurring isotope of thorium, Th 232, is also its most stable, having a half-life of 14.1 billion years. Atomic number 90; atomic weight 232.038; approximate melting point 1,750°C; approximate boiling point 4,500°C; approximate specific gravity 11.7; valence 4. See Periodic Table.