mineral kingdom
Noun: - The realm of all inorganic matter: The "mineral kingdom" is a traditional classification term encompassing all non-living, inorganic natural objects and substances, such as rocks, minerals, metals, and gemstones. It is explicitly contrasted with the living kingdoms, specifically the animal and plant kingdoms.
The term is used in historical, philosophical, or educational contexts to categorize the natural world into three broad domains: animal, vegetable (plant), and mineral. It emphasizes the distinction between living organisms and non-living matter. - In older systems of natural history, the physical world was divided into the animal, vegetable, and mineral kingdoms. - Geology is the primary science concerned with the study of the mineral kingdom.
- The concept is largely archaic in modern scientific taxonomy but persists in certain contexts like the game "Twenty Questions," where the first question is often "Is it animal, vegetable, or mineral?"
- It can be used metaphorically to describe something as inert, unchanging, or non-biological.
- The frozen landscape seemed a part of the mineral kingdom, devoid of any life.
- Mineral (n): A naturally occurring, inorganic solid with a definite chemical composition and crystalline structure. This is the fundamental unit of the mineral kingdom.
- Quartz is a common mineral.
- Inorganic (adj): Not consisting of or derived from living matter; relating to or denoting compounds not containing carbon (with some exceptions like carbonates).
- The cliff was composed of inorganic rock.
- Inorganic world/nature: The collective realm of non-living matter.
- Lithosphere (in a specific geological sense): The rigid outer part of the earth, consisting of the crust and upper mantle, though this is more specific than the broad "mineral kingdom."
This term represents a categorical meaning rather than describing a single object. It does not have phrasal verbs or idioms associated with its direct use, as it functions as a defined conceptual category.
- all inorganic objects; contrasts with animal and plant kingdoms