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essential oil |
Also found in: Medical, Wikipedia | 0.03 sec. |
essential oilAny of a class of highly volatile (readily evaporating) organic compounds found in plants and usually named for them (e.g., rose oil, peppermint oil). They have been known and traded since ancient times. Many essential oils contain isoprenoids. Some, such as oil of wintergreen (methyl salicylate) and orange oil (d-limonene), have one predominant component, but most have dozens or hundreds. Trace components impart an oil's characteristic odour, which synthetic or blended oils can rarely duplicate. Essential oils have three primary commercial uses: as odorants in perfumes, soaps, detergents, and other products; as flavours in baked goods, candies, soft drinks, and many other foods; and as pharmaceuticals, in dental products and many medicines (see aromatherapy). |
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On one hand, we have the case of a physical inclusion as with the employment of hydrosols. While hydrosols have been used in aromatherapy for hundreds of years, they did not exist in body-care formulations until companies started adding them to largely existing formulas specifically so they could call them organic," says Cummins. |
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