| 1. | to reply to, usually in a sharp or retaliatory way; reply in kind to. |
| 2. | to return (an accusation, epithet, etc.) upon the person uttering it. |
| 3. | to answer (an argument or the like) by another to the contrary. |
| 4. | a severe, incisive, or witty reply, esp. one that counters a first speaker's statement, argument, etc. |
| 5. | the act of retorting. |
| 1. | Chemistry.
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| 2. | a sterilizer for food cans. |
| 3. | to sterilize food after it is sealed in a container, by steam or other heating methods. |
| 4. | Chemistry. to subject (shale, ore, etc.) to heat and possibly reduced pressure in order to produce fuel oil, metal, etc. |
re·tort 1 (rĭ-tôrt') v. re·tort·ed, re·tort·ing, re·torts v. tr.
[Latin retorquēre, retort-, to bend back, retort : re-, re- + torquēre, to bend, twist; see terkw- in Indo-European roots.] re·tort'er n. |
retort re·tort (rĭ-tôrt', rē'tôrt')
n.
A closed laboratory vessel with an outlet tube, used for distillation, sublimation, or decomposition by heat.
| retort (rĭ-tôrt', rē'-) Pronunciation Key
A glass laboratory vessel in the shape of a bulb with a long, downward-pointing outlet tube. It is used for distillation or decomposition by heat. |
retort
vessel used for distillation of substances that are placed inside and subjected to heat. The simple form of retort, used in some laboratories, is a glass or metal bulb having a long, curved spout through which the distillate may pass to enter a receiving vessel. The design dates back to the cucurbit (flask) used by medieval alchemists.
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