enricher


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en·rich

 (ĕn-rĭch′)
tr.v. en·riched, en·rich·ing, en·rich·es
1. To make rich or richer.
2. To make fuller, more meaningful, or more rewarding: An appreciation of art will enrich your life.
3. To add fertilizer to.
4. To add a nutrient or nutrients to: a government program to enrich flour with folic acid.
5. To add to the beauty or character of; adorn: "Glittering tears enriched her eyes" (Arnold Bennett).
6. Physics To increase the amount of one or more radioactive isotopes in (a material, especially a nuclear fuel).

[Middle English enrichen, from Old French enrichier : en-, causative pref.; see en-1 + riche, rich; see rich.]

en·rich′er n.
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
References in periodicals archive ?
Lists of chemicals with known AhR activity were identified using multiple AhR-related Tox 21 reporter assays extracted from the tool Tox21 Enricher (Hur et al.
He was a visionary leader, builder, life enricher, motivator, and a champion for people from all walks of life.
Calma explained that being a legume, the ipil-ipil was an excellent soil enricher that at the same time prevented erosion.
Responding to the knowledge that role-framed, peer-led, small group interaction around text can be valuable for improving reading (Daniels, 1994, 2002; Palincsar & Brown, 1984), the Literacy Circles Progression promotes the initial use of four core roles--Discussion Director, Vocabulary Enricher, Connector and Summariser.
The surplus SWU output can be sold or the plants can be underfed so that the enricher ends up with excess uranium for sale, or with enriched product for its own inventory and later sale.
Molecular oxygen enricher: Also called polymeric membrane, this uses a semi-permeable membrane that permits selective diffusion of oxygen and water, which produces gas of high humidity enriched to approximately 40% oxygen.
Rhizobium is said to be known as the oldest biofertilizer in the world for leguminous crops and enricher of the soil fertility (Theophrastus, 372-287 BC, as reported by Danso, 1992).
If you have to sort out your rubbish, you might as well make use of the matter which can be turned into a terrific soil enricher.
If you have to sort out your rubbish, you might as well make use of the matter that can be turned into a terrific soil enricher.
If you have to sort out your rubbish, you might as well make use of the matter which can be turned into a terrific soil enricher. However, it isn't just a matter of piling up your vegetable peelings and grass cuttings and turning them every so often.