Definition
A bitter alkaloid compound found in certain plants, particularly in species related to quince or medlar.
Etymology
From coto plus the chemical suffix -in, applied when the compound was first isolated from coto tree bark.
Kelly Says
Plant alkaloids like cotoin were crucial to early pharmacology—before chemists could synthesize medicines, they isolated bitter compounds from bark and leaves using taste, smell, and observation.
Translations
ARالعربية
كوتوين
ko-to-win
CSČeština
cotoin
ko-toi-n
DEDeutsch
cotoin
ko-toi-n
ELΕλληνικά
κοτοιν
ko-toi-n
ESEspañol
cotoin
ko-toi-n
FRFrançais
cotoin
ko-toi-n
IDBahasa Indonesia
cotoin
ko-toi-n
ITItaliano
cotoin
ko-toi-n
MSBahasa Melayu
cotoin
ko-toi-n
MYမြန်မာ
ကိုတိုင်း
ko-toi-ng
NLNederlands
cotoin
ko-toi-n
PTPortuguês
cotoin
ko-toi-n
RUРусский
котоин
ko-toi-n
SVSvenska
cotoin
ko-toi-n
SWKiswahili
cotoin
ko-toi-n
TAதமிழ்
கோட்டோயின்
ko-tto-yin
TEతెలుగు
కోటోయిన్
ko-to-yin
UKУкраїнська
котоїн
ko-toi-in
VITiếng Việt
cotoin
ko-toi-n