metal

[ met-l ]
/ ˈmɛt l /

noun

verb (used with object), met·aled, met·al·ing or (especially British) met·alled, met·al·ling.

to furnish or cover with metal.
British. to pave or surface (a road) with broken stone.

Origin of metal

1250–1300; Middle English (< Old French) < Latin metallum quarry, metal < Greek métallon mine, quarry, metal

OTHER WORDS FROM metal

met·al·like, adjective un·met·aled, adjective un·met·alled, adjective

WORDS THAT MAY BE CONFUSED WITH metal

medal meddle metal mettle

Definition for metal (2 of 2)

metal.

Example sentences from the Web for metal

British Dictionary definitions for metal (1 of 2)

metal
/ (ˈmɛtəl) /

noun

adjective

made of metal

verb -als, -alling or -alled or US -als, -aling or -aled (tr)

to fit or cover with metal
to make or mend (a road) with road metal

Derived forms of metal

metal-like, adjective

Word Origin for metal

C13: from Latin metallum mine, product of a mine, from Greek metallon

British Dictionary definitions for metal (2 of 2)

metal.

metall.


abbreviation for

metallurgical
metallurgy

Medical definitions for metal

metal
[ mĕtl ]

n.

Any of a category of electropositive elements that usually reflect light, are generally good conductors of heat and electricity, and can be melted or fused, hammered into thin sheets, or drawn into wires. Typical metals form salts with nonmetals, basic oxides with oxygen, and alloys with one another.
An alloy of two or more metallic elements.
An object made of metal.

Scientific definitions for metal

metal
[ mĕtl ]

Any of a large group of chemical elements, including iron, gold, copper, lead, and magnesium, that readily become cations and form ionic bonds, having relatively free valence electrons (electrons in the outer shells). Metals are generally good conductors of electricity because of the freedom of their valence electrons. Metals generally conduct heat well, and in solid form are relatively malleable and ductile compared to other solids. They are usually shiny and opaque. All metals except mercury are solid at room temperature.
An alloy, such as steel or bronze, made of two or more metals.
In astronomy, any atom except hydrogen and helium.
Small stones or gravel, mixed with tar to form tarmac for the surfacing of roads.

Usage

Most metallic elements are lustrous or colorful solids that are good conductors of heat and electricity, and readily form ionic bonds with other elements. Many of their properties are due to the fact that their outermost electrons, called valence electrons, are not tightly bound to the nucleus. For instance, most metals form ionic bonds easily because they readily give up valence electrons to other atoms, thereby becoming positive ions (cations). The electrical conductivity of metals also stems from the relative freedom of valence electrons. In a substance composed of metals, the atoms are in a virtual ”sea“ of valence electrons that readily jump from atom to atom in the presence of an electric potential, creating electric current. With the exception of hydrogen, which behaves like a metal only at very high pressures, the elements that appear in the left-hand column of the Periodic Table are called alkali metals. Alkali metals, such as sodium and potassium, have only one electron in their outermost shell, and are chemically very reactive. (Hydrogen is exceptional in that, although it is highly reactive, its other metallic properties are manifest only at very high pressures.) Metals farther toward the right side of the Periodic Table, such as tin and lead, have more electrons in their outermost shell, and are not as reactive. The somewhat reactive elements that fall between the two extremes are the transition elements, such as iron, copper, tungsten, and silver. In most atoms, inner electron shells must be maximally occupied by electrons before an outer shell will accept electrons, but many transition elements have electron gaps in the shell just inside the valence shell. This configuration leads to a wide variety of available energy levels for electrons to move about in, so in the presence of electromagnetic radiation such as light, a variety of frequencies are readily emitted or absorbed. Thus transition metals tend to be very colorful, and each contributes different colors to different compounds.