Crossword clues for aerated
aerated
- Made fizzy
- Like white water
- Filled with bubbles
- Treated like dirt?
- Made sparkling, say
- Like soda water
- Like Jacuzzi water
- Like hot tub water
- Like Coke and Pepsi
- Infused with gas
- Infused with fizz
- Infused with carbon dioxide
- Gave fizz to
- Gassed up?
- Effervescent, perhaps
- Carbonated (7)
- Added bubbles to
- Bubbly
- Made bubbly, in a way
- Charged with gas
- Poked holes in, say
- Purified, as water
- Exposed to oxygen
- Turned, as topsoil
- Rich in oxygen
- Supplied with oxygen
- Treated a lawn
- Caused air to bubble through
- Made effervescent
- Treated with carbon dioxide
- Made soda
- A scolded bishop ignored bubbly
- Charged with bubbles
The Collaborative International Dictionary
aerated \aerated\ adj.
treated by having air passed or bubbled through it for purification; -- of a liquid
-
(Physiol.) supplied with oxygen by respiration; -- used of tissues or especially blood
Syn: oxygenated
-
1 supplied with carbon dioxide
Syn: charged
Wiktionary
1 Supplied or infused with air or oxygen 2 (label en informal) annoyed, agitated v
(en-past of: aerate)
WordNet
adj. (of a liquid) treated by having air passed or bubbled through it for purification
used of tissues or especially blood; supplied with oxygen by respiration [syn: oxygenated]
supplied with carbon dioxide [syn: charged]
Usage examples of "aerated".
My mother bought a brick cottage in Pulteney street and a Burra share with her legacy--both excellent investments--and my brother left the bank and went into the aerated water business with James Hamilton Parr.
Count Bunker, arrayed in a becoming suit of knickerbockers, and looking as fresh as if he had feasted last night on aerated water, who sat down to consume it.
But the spell breaks, the cut is plunged into the aerated stream of her Puraflo faucet, the finger wrapped in a floral blue paper towel.
Assume it, and it follows that if all the blood in a man could be aerated with one breath, he might then seal up his nostrils and not fetch another for a considerable time.
Vickson had known that the robot doctor in the control room would do the only thing possible to save his life while under full acceleration: by-pass his heart with a mechanical heart, and put it in conjunction with a mechanical lung that frothed and aerated his blood.