nonnoble

nonnoble

(ˌnɒnˈnəʊbəl)
adj
not noble
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
Mentioned in ?
References in periodicals archive ?
In light of the above, a thought stimulates us to investigate whether the nonnoble metal of Cu could promote the catalytic performance of Pt for the hydrogenation of cinnamaldehyde.
The broader burgher class included all lay, nonnoble city dwellers, among them artisans and laborers.
Here, O's analysis would have been strengthened by a more complex idea of the the noble class(es), rather than proceeding as though there were two monolithic social blocs, nobles and nonnoble servants, when in households of the highest nobility and royalty, those who served were often lesser nobles.
Recently, several studies related to HCHO removal at low temperature have been carried out using supported noble metal (Pt, Rh, Au, and Pd) [6, 7,13,14] and nonnoble metal catalysts [15, 16].
(And, as a disclaimer, I do not pretend that this begins to address issues of privilege in anything like the way it's being done elsewhere.) I will first use a historical approach to demonstrate that the trouble Gesualdo causes to the category of nobleman stems not from the act of composition but rather from his competitiveness with regard to nonnoble composers.
But it is a love based on a mutual blind spot: his "punctum caecum" is her snobbery, which he keeps hoping does not really exist; and hers is his nonnoble rank, which she allows herself to deny.
(49.) Unlike the episcopate in Catholic continental Europe, the Henrician episcopate was comprised of nobles without royal ties and at least thirty percent from "socially minded nonnoble classes." See Andrew A.
Another aspect of the acid and alkaline work is development of electrodes with nonnoble metal catalysts, which, if substituted, would help reduce cell costs significantly.