• Ingot

    Pronunciation

    • IPA: /ˈɪŋgÉ™t/

    Origin

    From Middle English ingot ("something poured in"), from Old English *ingot, ingyte ("a pouring in, infusion, inspiration"), from Proto-Germanic *in ("in") + *gutaz, *gutiz ("gush, flow"), from Proto-Germanic *geutaną ("to flow, pour"), from Proto-Indo-European *ǵʰew- ("to pour"), equivalent to - + gote or - + yote. Cognate with German Einguss ("in-pouring, sprue"), Swedish ingjut ("in-pouring"), Dutch ingieten ("to pour in"), Scots gote ("drain, ditch, gutter"), Swedish göt ("ingot"). More at gote, goit, yote.

    Alternative etymology derives Middle English ingot from ingoten ("poured in"), from Old English ingoten, past participle of inġēotan ("to pour in, fill"), from the same Proto-Germanic base as above.

    Full definition of ingot

    Noun

    ingot

    (plural ingots)
    1. A solid block of more or less pure metal, often but not necessarily bricklike in shape and trapezoidal in cross-section, the result of pouring out and cooling molten metal, often immediately after smelting from raw ore or alloying from constituents.

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