From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishchromiumchro‧mi‧um /ˈkrəʊmiəm $ ˈkroʊ-/ noun [uncountable] HCMa hard blue-white metal that is used to cover metal objects with a shiny silver protective surface. It is a chemical element: symbol Cr a chromium-plated handrail
Examples from the Corpus
chromium• He smelled the bitter fragrance of ablated chromium steel.• High levels of cadmium, lead and chromium were also found in sediment in the Dogger Bank.• Inorganic chemistry in particular provided the bulk of new pigments based on chromium, cadmium, cobalt, zinc, copper and arsenic.• Physicians then found that some diabetics were able to tolerate sugar better when they were given some chromium.• But just as uncertain is whether anyone needs to take chromium at all.• She's misjudged the weight of the chromium door and crushed her big toe.• The chromium, used to prevent pipe corrosion, was released from 1951 until 1966, but lingered in groundwater.• But, as with chromium picolinate, the stars of various supplements rise and fall in the media faster than Hollywood careers.Origin chromium (1800-1900) Modern Latin French chrome; → CHROME