0 a chemical element that is a silver-white, poisonous metal. It is hard but easily broken and is used to make other metals harder and stronger and to make semiconductors for computers. --
You can get there nearly every mineral—gold, silver, oil, copper, tin, manganese, and even antimony.
Among these are lead, nickel, antimony, high-speed steel, and castor oil.
It also concludes that concentrations of antimony, lead, copper, tin and zinc in the locality are low and unlikely to cause any adverse health effects.
They are mainly polybrominated organic compounds and derivatives of phosphorus and antimony—just the sort of compounds the green organisations love to hate.
The human toxicity of stibine, the gas produced from antimony, is dependent on the quantity present and the exposure of any individual to the gas.
The soil contained very low levels of copper, lead, zinc, cadmium, nickel, chromium, arsenic, antimony and mercury.
Enamelled hollow ware containing antimony is made both in this country and in foreign countries.
That element became known as antimonk, for obvious reasons, and in turn as antimony.