adjective Chemistry.
- pertaining to or occupying two adjacent positions in the benzene ring.Compare meta2, para3.
- a combining form occurring in loanwords from Greek, where it meant “straight,” “upright,” “right,” “correct” (orthodox) and on this model used in the formation of compound words (orthopedic).
- Chemistry.
- a combining form used in the name of that acid in a given series of acids that contains the most water (orthoboric acid).Compare meta-, pyro-.
- a combining form used in the names of the salts of these acids: if the acid ends in -ic, the corresponding salt ends in -ate (orthoboric acid (H3BO3) and potassium orthoborate (K3BO3)); if the acid ends in -ous, the corresponding salt ends in -ite (orthoantimonous acid (H3SbO3) and potassium orthoantimonite (K3SbO3)).
combining form
- straight or uprightorthotropous
- perpendicular or at right anglesorthoclastic
- correct or rightorthodontics; orthodox; orthography; orthoptics
- (often in italics) denoting an organic compound containing a benzene ring with substituents attached to adjacent carbon atoms (the 1,2- positions)orthodinitrobenzene Abbreviation: o- Compare oarsman Compare oarsman
- denoting an oxyacid regarded as the highest hydrated form of the anhydride or a salt of such an acidorthophosphoric acid See meta- (def. 6)
- denoting a diatomic substance in which the spins of the two atoms are parallelorthohydrogen See para- 1 (def. 8)
before vowels orth-, word-forming element meaning “straight, upright, rectangular, regular; true, correct, proper,” now mostly in scientific and technical compounds, from Greek ortho-, stem of orthos “straight, true, correct, regular,” from PIE *eredh- “high” (cf. Sanskrit urdhvah “high, lofty, steep,” Latin arduus “high, steep,” Old Irish ard “high”). pref.
- Straight; upright; vertical:orthotropic.
- Correct; correction:orthopsychiatry.
- Hydrated form of an acid or of its salts:orthoboric acid.
- Diatomic molecules in which the nuclei have the same direction of spin:orthohydrogen.
- Of or relating to one of three possible isomers of a benzene ring with adjacent carbon atoms having attached chemical groups:ortho-dibromobenzene.