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I was reading a document and I was not sure of the technical meaning of the two words. Aurum means gold and is well defined in multiple sources. Utalium does not show up in dictionary.com, askoxford.com or investorpedia.com. I can see people using the phrase but not a specific definition of the work Utalium. Most of the examples are in forums or other places where I can not be sure if the user is correctly using the term.

Guessing I might conclude that Utalium means bullion. I would rather have a specific dictionary reference.

Any helpful pointers for a true definition that I can cite?

2007-01-29 23:34:27 · 1 answers · asked by Anonymous in Business & Finance Other - Business & Finance

1 answers

Utalium is New Latin.

The two core words are:
"utalis" for "is useful"
and
"-ium", which is new latin (Rennaissance, as opposed to Roman times). It is a suffix that is solely used to describe earthly elements.

Together, the word means "useful element".

2007-02-01 15:59:26 · answer #1 · answered by csanda 6 · 1 0

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