From cool + -ant.
coolant (plural coolants)
- A medium, usually fluid, used to draw heat from an object.
Coolant is used in car engines and industrial processes, where excess heat could cause machine damage.
1962 October, M. J. Wilson, “Three years of dieselisation at Devons Road depot”, in Modern Railways, page 264:Anti-freeze has not been found necessary, even in the most severe conditions, since the water is drained out if a locomotive spends any appreciable time out of service and in normal working conditions the coolant is always warm.
a fluid
- Bulgarian: охлажда́щ аге́нт m (ohlaždášt agént)
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 冷卻劑/冷却剂 (zh) (lěngquèjì)
- Czech: chladicí kapalina f
- Dutch: koelmiddel (nl) n, koelvloeistof (nl) m or f
- Finnish: jäähdytysaine, jäähdytysneste (fi), jäähdyte, jäähdytys- (in compounds, e.g. jäähdytysvesi (“coolant water”))
- French: fluide caloporteur (fr) m, réfrigérant (fr) m, liquide de refroidissement m
- Galician: refrixerante m
- German: Kühlmittel (de) n, Kühlflüssigkeit (de) f
- Hungarian: hűtőfolyadék (hu)
- Icelandic: kælivökvi m, kæliefni n
- Italian: refrigerante (it) m, antigelo (it) m
- Japanese: 冷却剤 (れいきゃくざい, reikyakuzai)
- Korean: 냉각제(冷却劑) (naenggakje), 랭각제(冷却劑) (raenggakje) (North Korea)
- Lithuanian: šilumnešis (lt) m, aušinimo skystis m
- Norwegian:
- Bokmål: kjølevæske m or f, kjølevann n
- Nynorsk: kjølevæske f
- Polish: chłodziwo (pl) n
- Portuguese: refrigerante (pt)
- Russian: охлажда́ющая жи́дкость (ru) f (oxlaždájuščaja žídkostʹ), теплоноси́тель (ru) m (teplonosítelʹ)
- Slovak: chladiaca kvapalina f
- Spanish: refrigerante m
- Ukrainian: теплоносі́й m (teplonosíj)
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