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Thermometer
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English Dictionary: thermometer by the DICT Development Group
2 results for thermometer
From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006) [wn]:
thermometer
n
  1. measuring instrument for measuring temperature
From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) [web1913]:
   Thermometer \Ther*mom"e*ter\, n. [Thermo- + -meter: cf. F.
      thermom[8a]tre. See {Thermal}.] (Physics)
      An instrument for measuring temperature, founded on the
      principle that changes of temperature in bodies are
      accompained by proportional changes in their volumes or
      dimensions.
  
      Note: The thermometer usually consists of a glass tube of
               capillary bore, terminating in a bulb, and containing
               mercury or alcohol, which expanding or contracting
               according to the temperature to which it is exposed,
               indicates the degree of heat or cold by the amount of
               space occupied, as shown by the position of the top of
               the liquid column on a graduated scale. See
               {Centigrade}, {Fahrenheit}, and {R[82]aumur}. To reduce
               degrees Fahrenheit to degrees Centigrade, substract
               32[f8] and multiply by [frac59]; to reduce degrees
               Centigrade to degrees Fahrenheit, multiply by [frac95]
               and add 32[f8].
  
      {Air thermometer}, {Balance thermometer}, etc. See under
            {Air}, {Balance}, etc.
  
      {Metallic thermometer}, a form of thermometer indicating
            changes of temperature by the expansion or contraction of
            rods or strips of metal.
  
      {Register thermometer}, [or] {Self-registering thermometer},
            a thermometer that registers the maximum and minimum of
            temperature occurring in the interval of time between two
            consecutive settings of the instrument. A common form
            contains a bit of steel wire to be pushed before the
            column and left at the point of maximum temperature, or a
            slide of enamel, which is drawn back by the liquid, and
            left within it at the point of minimum temperature.
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