by candle wax consumer February 3, 2025
Get the battery acidmug. by suksha February 2, 2024
Get the lucid acid jackassmug. The scientific term for the amount of acid that the artist was on when writing a song, often used in regards to music by Led Zeppelin, later Beatles music, and anything by Pink Floyd.
Man1: Dude, I Am the Walrus is so friggin trippy
Man2: Indeed, its staggering acidity can get you a contact high just listening to it
Man2: Indeed, its staggering acidity can get you a contact high just listening to it
by RockinRolla21 April 27, 2012
Get the Aciditymug. Acid that produces a dreadful, ominous, evil, yet lonely feeling in the pit of your soul. Continued use results in madness.
by Maybe1234 August 22, 2012
Get the Seleucid acidmug. by VivaLaTrashcan August 31, 2016
Get the Acid Twigmug. Definition1: Street slang for cocaine infused marijuana. When you do both cocaine and marijuana at the same time, it's called doing acid.
If someone says they did acid, then they are saying they did pot and coke simultaneously.
If someone says they did acid, then they are saying they did pot and coke simultaneously.
PERSON1: I did acid the other day.
Person 2: No way. So you did coke and pot at the same time?
Person 1: Yuhp.
Person 2: No way. So you did coke and pot at the same time?
Person 1: Yuhp.
by PCP, TheRealLSD November 21, 2021
Get the acidmug. An acid/base definition that suggests an Brønsted–Lowry acid is any molecule that can donate a proton, and a Brønsted–Lowry base is any molecule that accepts the proton. Protons can be referred to as H+ or "hydrogen ions," so if you see those terms used in a textbook they all mean the same thing. When a Brønsted–Lowry acid gives its proton away, it is "deprotonated" and can now accept a proton; now that it has become an acceptor, it is referred to as a conjugate base. The same rule applies to Brønsted–Lowry bases: once they gain a proton (are protonated), they are known as conjugate acids.
student: i'm a little confused with this functional group. the reading says that the carboxylic acid (COOH) group loses its proton, H, making the formula COO−. now that there's a space on the oxygen that's vacant, could the group accept a proton in the empty space? wouldn't that make the group a base?
teacher: yeah, acids turn into things known as conjugate bases when they lose hydrogen ions. the space where a proton used to be is now available for bonding, and the group or molecule becomes a proton acceptor/Brønsted–Lowry base
that's how you use the Bronsted-Lowry/Brønsted–Lowry Acid-Base Theory
teacher: yeah, acids turn into things known as conjugate bases when they lose hydrogen ions. the space where a proton used to be is now available for bonding, and the group or molecule becomes a proton acceptor/Brønsted–Lowry base
that's how you use the Bronsted-Lowry/Brønsted–Lowry Acid-Base Theory
by ilikesciencemorethanyoudo July 6, 2025
Get the Bronsted-Lowry/Brønsted–Lowry Acid-Base Theorymug.