also nitroglycerin, violently explosive oily light-yellow liquid, 1857, from nitro- + glycerin. So called either because it was obtained by treating glycerine with nitric and sulfuric acids or because it is essentially a nitrate (glyceryl trinitrate). The essential element of dynamite; it is a violent poison when ingested, but in minute doses it is used in the treatment of angina and heart failure.
nitric
nitrification
nitro
nitro-
nitrogen
nitroglycerine
nitrous
nitty
nitty-gritty
nitwit
niveous