bornyl acetate: meaning, definition, pronunciation and examples

Very Low / Technical
UK/ˈbɔːnɪl ˈæsɪteɪt/US/ˈbɔːrnɪl ˈæsɪˌteɪt/

Technical / Scientific

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Quick answer

What does “bornyl acetate” mean?

A chemical compound with the formula C₁₂H₂₀O₂, an ester of borneol and acetic acid.

Audio

Pronunciation

Definition

Meaning and Definition

A chemical compound with the formula C₁₂H₂₀O₂, an ester of borneol and acetic acid.

A natural organic compound often found in coniferous trees, used as a fragrance ingredient and solvent in perfumes, flavours, and some industrial applications.

Dialectal Variation

British vs American Usage

Differences

No significant differences in usage or spelling. It is a technical, non-variant term.

Connotations

None beyond its technical definition.

Frequency

Equally rare in both dialects, appearing only in specialised contexts.

Grammar

How to Use “bornyl acetate” in a Sentence

bornyl acetate is used as + noun (a solvent/fragrance)bornyl acetate occurs in + noun (pine oil/needles)bornyl acetate was synthesised by + method/agent

Vocabulary

Collocations

strong
synthetic bornyl acetatenatural bornyl acetatesolution of bornyl acetate
medium
extract containing bornyl acetatebornyl acetate contentodour of bornyl acetate
weak
compound like bornyl acetateapplication of bornyl acetate

Examples

Examples of “bornyl acetate” in a Sentence

adjective

British English

  • The bornyl acetate fraction was isolated.

American English

  • The bornyl acetate component was analysed.

Usage

Meaning in Context

Business

May appear in procurement or product specifications for fragrance or flavour industries.

Academic

Used in chemistry, biochemistry, or natural product research papers and textbooks.

Everyday

Virtually never used.

Technical

Primary context: chemical analysis, perfumery formulation, and natural product chemistry.

Vocabulary

Synonyms of “bornyl acetate”

Neutral

borneol acetate

Weak

pine camphor (historical/imprecise)

Watch out

Common Mistakes When Using “bornyl acetate”

  • Spelling: 'bornil', 'bornol', 'bornyle'. Incorrect hyphenation: 'bornyl-acetate'. Misidentifying it as a common name rather than a systematic chemical name.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

It is generally considered low toxicity, but like all chemicals, safety depends on concentration and exposure. Always consult Safety Data Sheets (SDS) for specific hazards.

Yes, but not by name. It may be a minor component in some fragrances, air fresheners, or flavourings, listed simply as 'fragrance' or 'flavouring'.

In science, it's studied as a natural product. In industry, it's valued for its fresh, pine-like odour in perfumery and as a flavouring agent.

In British English, it's /ˈbɔːnɪl/ (BORN-il). In American English, it's /ˈbɔːrnɪl/ (BORN-il), with a slightly more pronounced 'r'.

A chemical compound with the formula C₁₂H₂₀O₂, an ester of borneol and acetic acid.

Bornyl acetate is usually technical / scientific in register.

Learning

Memory Aids

Mnemonic

Think of BORN (as in pine tree) + YL (a chemical suffix) ACETATE (a type of chemical salt); together they make a compound from pine trees.

Conceptual Metaphor

None in general language. In technical contexts, it might be framed as a 'building block' or 'note' in fragrance composition.

Practice

Quiz

Fill in the gap
The characteristic smell of some conifers is partly due to the presence of .
Multiple Choice

In which field is the term 'bornyl acetate' most commonly used?