Southern England| Kieli | Käännökset |
|---|---|
| bulgaria | газ (gaz) |
| espanja | queroseno |
| esperanto | petrolo, keroseno |
| italia | cherosene, petrolio |
| japani | 灯油 (tōyu / toboshiabura / tomoshiabura), ケロシン (keroshin), オイル (oiru), 石油 (sekiyu), せきゆ (sekiyu) |
| liettua | žibalas |
| norja | paraffin |
| portugali | querosene |
| puola | nafta |
| ranska | kérosène, pétrole |
| ruotsi | fotogen |
| saksa | Kerosin, Petroleum, Paraffinöl |
| suomi | petroli, lämmityspetroli, kerosiini, paloöljy, valopetroli, lentopetroli |
| tšekki | petrolej |
| unkari | kerozin |
| venäjä | керосин (kerosin) |
| viro | petrooleum, lambiõli |
| Monikko | kerosenes |
A thin, often colorless or blue or straw-colored petroleum-based fuel, heavier than gasoline/petrol or naphtha but lighter than diesel, used primarily as jet fuel but also for heating and lighting in some remote or impoverished areas.
A kerosene bottle, containing blue-dyed kerosene
A thin, often colorless or blue or straw-colored petroleum-based fuel, heavier than gasoline/petrol or naphtha but lighter than diesel, used primarily as jet fuel but also for heating and lighting in some remote or impoverished areas.
Persian scholar Rāzi (or Rhazes) was the first to distil kerosene in the ninth century. He is depicted here in a manuscript by Gerard of Cremona.