amidinohydrazone: meaning, definition, pronunciation and examples

Very Low (Highly Specialised)
UK/ˌæmɪdaɪnəʊˈhaɪdrəzəʊn/US/ˌæmɪdɪnoʊˈhaɪdrəzoʊn/

Scientific/Technical (Exclusively)

My Flashcards

Quick answer

What does “amidinohydrazone” mean?

A specific type of organic compound with the characteristic structure of a hydrazone group attached to an amidine group.

Audio

Pronunciation

Definition

Meaning and Definition

A specific type of organic compound with the characteristic structure of a hydrazone group attached to an amidine group.

In broader chemical contexts, it refers to a class of compounds often studied for their properties as chelating agents, their role in synthesizing heterocyclic compounds, or their biological activity in medicinal chemistry research.

Dialectal Variation

British vs American Usage

Differences

No significant lexical or spelling differences exist for this term. Pronunciations may differ slightly (see IPA). Usage is identical in scientific literature globally, following IUPAC nomenclature conventions.

Connotations

None. The word is purely denotative, carrying no cultural or stylistic connotations.

Frequency

Identically rare in all English-speaking scientific communities. Its appearance is confined to highly specialised chemical research papers, patents, or advanced textbooks.

Grammar

How to Use “amidinohydrazone” in a Sentence

The [amidinohydrazone] [VERB: chelates, forms, reacts] with [metal ion].

Vocabulary

Collocations

strong
synthesis offormation ofderivative(s) ofstructure ofreaction ofcomplexes of
medium
novel amidinohydrazonechelating amidinohydrazonebiological activity ofantimicrobial amidinohydrazone
weak
compoundligandagentmoiety

Examples

Examples of “amidinohydrazone” in a Sentence

adjective

British English

  • The amidinohydrazone complexes were characterised by NMR.
  • An amidinohydrazone-based sensor was developed.

American English

  • The amidinohydrazone complexes were characterized by NMR.
  • An amidinohydrazone-based sensor was developed.

Usage

Meaning in Context

Business

Not used. Would only appear in highly specific contexts like pharmaceutical R&D reports or patent documents.

Academic

Exclusive domain. Found in advanced organic chemistry, medicinal chemistry, or coordination chemistry journal articles, theses, and textbooks.

Everyday

Never used.

Technical

Core usage. Refers to a precise chemical structure in research, development, and analytical documentation.

Vocabulary

Synonyms of “amidinohydrazone”

Strong

N'-(diaminomethylene)hydrazide (systematic IUPAC-based description)

Neutral

amidinohydrazone derivative

Weak

hydrazone-type ligandamidine-based compound

Watch out

Common Mistakes When Using “amidinohydrazone”

  • Misspelling: 'amidinhydrazone', 'amidino-hydrazone' (hyphen optional).
  • Mispronunciation: Incorrect syllable stress (e.g., on 'am' instead of 'hy').
  • Overgeneralisation: Assuming it is a common word or has meaning outside chemistry.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

No, it is an extremely rare and highly specialised term used only in advanced scientific contexts, primarily organic and medicinal chemistry.

Absolutely not. It is far beyond the vocabulary required for any standard English language exam (IELTS, TOEFL, Cambridge) or for general fluency. It is a subject-specific technical term.

A common pronunciation is /ˌæmɪdɪnoʊˈhaɪdrəzoʊn/ in American English, with the main stress on 'hy' and a secondary stress on 'am'. The British pronunciation is similar, with /əʊ/ instead of /oʊ/ in the final syllable.

No. It functions almost exclusively as a noun (or a noun modifier, e.g., 'amidinohydrazone compound'). It has no verb forms and would sound completely out of place in any non-technical conversation.

A specific type of organic compound with the characteristic structure of a hydrazone group attached to an amidine group.

Amidinohydrazone is usually scientific/technical (exclusively) in register.

Learning

Memory Aids

Mnemonic

Break it down: AMIDino (like 'amide' or 'amidine' groups in chemistry) + HYDRAzone (a 'hydrazone' is a type of compound containing a C=NN group). It's a hydrazone attached to an amidine group.

Conceptual Metaphor

None applicable. The term is a structural descriptor, not a conceptual metaphor.

Practice

Quiz

Fill in the gap
Researchers synthesized a new to test its potential as an antifungal agent.
Multiple Choice

In which field is the term 'amidinohydrazone' exclusively used?