Need another word that means the same as “byproduct”? Find 2 synonyms and 30 related words for “byproduct” in this overview.
Table Of Contents:
The synonyms of “Byproduct” are: by-product, spin-off
Byproduct as a Noun
Definitions of "Byproduct" as a noun
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “byproduct” as a noun can have the following definitions:
- A secondary and sometimes unexpected consequence.
- A product made during the manufacture of something else.
Synonyms of "Byproduct" as a noun (2 Words)
by-product | A secondary and sometimes unexpected consequence. |
spin-off | A product made during the manufacture of something else. |
Associations of "Byproduct" (30 Words)
additive | Designating or involving an equation whose terms are of the first degree. Many foods contain chemical additives. |
adipose | (especially of body tissue) used for the storage of fat. Adipose tissue constitutes the fat of meat. |
canvas | Cover with canvas. A canvas bag. |
chemistry | The way two individuals relate to each other. Their affair was triggered by intense sexual chemistry. |
cloth | A piece of cloth for cleaning or covering something e g a dishcloth or a tablecloth. Has he given up all ideas of the cloth. |
corporeal | Relating to a person’s body, especially as opposed to their spirit. That which is created is of necessity corporeal and visible and tangible. |
cotton | Textile fabric made from cotton fibre. A cotton reel. |
drapery | Cloth gracefully draped and arranged in loose folds. The hall of the school was hung with green drapery. |
experiment | A venture at something new or different. The composer experimented with a new style. |
extra | Excessive or extravagant. They offered him an extra thirty five cents an hour. |
felt | Cover with felt. Felt the wool. |
fibrosis | Development of excess fibrous connective tissue in an organ. |
filling | The act of filling something. An informal British term for filling is stopping. |
freon | An aerosol propellant, refrigerant, or organic solvent consisting of one or more of a group of chlorofluorocarbons and related compounds. |
interweave | Weave or become woven together. Wordsworth's political ideas are often interwoven with his philosophical and religious beliefs. |
item | Used to introduce each item in a list. Item two statute books item two drums. |
lined | Marked or covered with lines. He had kind eyes and a deeply lined face. |
material | Having material or physical form or substance. He was university material. |
matter | That which has mass and occupies space. We can do nothing to change matters. |
qualitative | (of an adjective) describing the quality of something in size, appearance, value, etc. Such adjectives can be submodified by words such as very and have comparative and superlative forms. Qualitative analysis determines the chemical constituents of a substance or mixture. |
qualitatively | In a qualitative manner. Security levels can be qualitatively assessed. |
resource | The ability to find clever ways to overcome difficulties resourcefulness. Japan s exploitation of commercially important marine resources. |
secondary | A secondary school. A secondary school. |
substratum | Any stratum or layer lying underneath another. There is a broad substratum of truth in her story. |
supplementary | A supplementary person or thing. Produced supplementary volumes. |
textile | The branch of industry involved in the manufacture of cloth. Textile beaches. |
thing | Used to express one s disapproval of or contempt for something. How does this thing work. |
valance | A sheet with a deep pleated or gathered border that is designed to hang down over the mattress and sides of a bed. |
vinyl | Vinyl used as the standard material for records. Fans had to wait almost a year before the song eventually appeared on vinyl. |
weft | (in weaving) the crosswise threads on a loom that are passed over and under the warp threads to make cloth. Weft threads. |