Wiktionary
n. (context biochemistry English) An anthocyanin, a diglucoside of malvidin, found in very many foods.
Wikipedia
Malvín is a barrio (neighbourhood or district) of Montevideo, Uruguay.
Malvin may refer to:
- Malvin, a naturally occurring chemical of the anthocyanin family
- Malvín and Malvín Norte, two neighborhoods of Montevideo, Uruguay
- Malvin (given name)
- Club Malvín, a sports club from Montevideo, Uruguay
- Roger Malvin's Burial, one of the lesser known short stories by Nathaniel Hawthorne
Malvin is a given name. It may refer to :
- Malvin Gray Johnson (1896-1934), an African American painter
- Malvin Kamara (born 1983), an English -born Sierra Leone an international football player
- Malvin Russell Goode, (1908–1995), an African-American television journalist and news correspondent
- Malvin Wald (1917-2008), an American screenwriter
Usage examples of "malvin".
He added the request from Warrendale that the commissioner go at once to the office of Cedric Malvin, where Warrendale would arrive by half-past six.
Inasmuch as Malvin will bind the deal with a cash payment of fifty thousand dollars to Warrendale, it is advisable that we should be witnesses to the transaction, to make sure that the money is safe.
Had Commissioner Weston stated that he was visiting Cedric Malvin, it would have meant comparatively little.
Whatever the deal between Hubert Warrendale, genius of finance, and Cedric Malvin, successful promoter, it meant money.
In his office, Cedric Malvin, a smallish, birdlike man, was seated behind a large desk, chatting with two visitors: Commissioner Weston and Inspector Cardona.
He stood face to face with Malvin, in the glare of the lamp from the desk.
He gave Malvin three quick bullets in the region of the heart, collapsing him like a dummy figure.
The man was in the light, and for the first time, Weston and Cardona saw what Malvin had observed with startlement.
Instead of merely being content to hide his own features, the killer had put on those of Hubert Warrendale, that blame for crime, on sight, might be placed upon the noted financier whose visit had been expected by Cedric Malvin, the victim!
Provided, of course, that neither of the living men guessed that his face was false, as Malvin had.
It appeared that Renz had phoned Warrendale that afternoon, stating that he would like to drop in after the Malvin deal was completed.
Upon signing up with Malvin, Warrendale was to have given Renz his share of the funds.
To all appearances, he was Cedric Malvin, a man who had died a sudden death about two hours before.
Anyone who expected to find Malvin here, still alive, would mistake Cranston for the dead promoter.
The Shadow to continue his pretense of being Malvin, whether Alker knew it to be a fake, or not.