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Example sentences for "agglutination"

Lexicographically close words:
agglomeration; agglomerations; agglutinate; agglutinated; agglutinating; agglutinative; aggrandise; aggrandisement; aggrandising; aggrandize
  1. In the forms which possess in the adult an adherent duodenum and mesoduodenum, as in man, the foramen of Winslow obtains a secondary caudal limit by the agglutination of the descending duodenum and the parietal prerenal peritoneum.

  2. These may or may not show agglutination when the result of the examination of the 5 per cent.

  3. For the collection of small quantities of blood for agglutination reactions and the like, many prefer a short straight piece of narrow glass tubing drawn out at either extremity to almost capillary dimensions.

  4. Similarly, of course, agglutination must have preceded the inflection of already agglutinated words; while the use of auxiliaries can be proved to have been historically subsequent to inflection.

  5. Sometimes the peritoneum is covered with patches of false membrane, or agglutination occurs with other portions of the intestine to give rise to contortions or occlusions.

  6. The resulting peritonitis is fatal as a rule, but the danger is obviated sometimes, as in typhoid fever, by agglutination of the gut to a contiguous structure or viscus.

  7. Also if agglutinins or precipitins be heated to the proper temperature they may retain their combining power but cause no agglutination or precipitation, i.

  8. The precipitin reaction has not found much practical use in bacteriology largely because the "agglutination test" takes its place as simpler of performance and just as accurate.

  9. In fact the specific precipitation and agglutination are strictly analogous phenomena.

  10. The tests used in laboratories for the diagnosis are the agglutination and complement-fixation tests, by which the disease may be diagnosed from a sample of blood from a suspected animal.

  11. A diagnosis may also be established by the complement-fixation or agglutination tests with the sera from suspected animals.

  12. The patient died the fourth day after the operation, from peritonitis, and an autopsy showed the perforation and agglutination of the two intestinal curvatures.

  13. The nut, when taken out, was found to have a consistency much larger than originally, caused by the agglutination of wax and blood.

  14. The positive reaction of agglutination and immotility, if the blood comes from a case of typhoid fever, will probably appear within fifteen or twenty minutes.

  15. The Australian is one of those languages (so valuable in general philology) where we find inflections in the act of forming, and that from the agglutination not of affixes, suffixes and prefixes, but of words.

  16. Beyond this, the tenses become complicated; and that because they are evidently formed by the agglutination of separate words; the so-called imperfect being undoubtedly formed by affixing the preterite form of the word to make.

  17. Agglutination is carried to a great length, and long words are very frequent.

  18. The principal characteristics of the language are euphony and brevity, to which all things else are subservient, but nevertheless, as I have shown already, agglutination is carried to the farthest extent.

  19. Agglutination or aggregation is carried to its widest extent, and words of inordinate length are not uncommon.

  20. I shall have, nesh wata As a specimen of agglutination there is the word ipinashapatawtrahliktamawarsha, he himself makes night disagreeably tiresome long wait; that is, he keeps one long waiting for him at night.

  21. The wet gains access to the inner structures of the wall, the agglutination of the horn fibres is weakened, and fissures begin to appear.

  22. Any stone which is composed of an agglutination of grains of sand, whether calcareous, siliceous, or of any other mineral nature.

  23. A stone possessing a structure like an agglutination of peas.

  24. An Italian name for a variety of volcanic rock of an earthy texture, seldom very compact, and composed of an agglutination of fragments of scoriae and loose materials ejected from a volcano.

  25. That advantage being once perceived, a few single forms in which agglutination first showed itself would soon, by that sense of analogy which is inherent in language, extend their influence irresistibly.

  26. The process of agglutination will continue in each clan, and forms becoming unintelligible will be easily replaced by new and more intelligible compounds.

  27. We can imagine that the precipitate forms a film around the egg and acts as a block for the agglutination between egg and spermatozoon.

  28. The writer has shown that an increase in the concentration of both substances may cause an agglutination of the spermatozoa of starfish to the jelly which surrounds the egg of purpuratus.

  29. Lillie[71] has studied the very striking phenomenon of transitory sperm agglutination which takes place when the sperm of a sea urchin or of certain annelids is put into the supernatant sea water of eggs of the same species.

  30. This view is supported not only by all the experiments but also by the observation of the writer that foreign sperm or blood is able to cause a real agglutination after some time if mixed with the sperm of a sea urchin or a starfish.

  31. We do not know definitely the nature of the forces which act in the case of phagocytosis--although surface tension forces and agglutination have been suggested; both are surface phenomena and are rapidly reversible.

  32. On such an assumption self-sterility would be due to a lack of agglutination between the egg of a hermaphrodite and a spermatozoon of the same individual.

  33. The serum of certain humans may cause the destruction or agglutination of blood corpuscles of certain other humans.

  34. He also found that the clusters are more durable in a neutral than in a slightly alkaline solution and that the agglutination disappears the more rapidly the more alkaline the solution.

  35. There is no question here of the process of agglutination and contamination whereby a number of short lays are supposed to be compounded into an epic poem.

  36. Thidreks Saga is not an epic, though it is made by an agglutination of ballads.

  37. It gives many openings for theories of agglutination and adulteration.

  38. Its cultural and agglutination reactions are almost, if not quite, identical with those of the bacilli found in human cases of paratyphoid fever which have no known connection with food poisoning.

  39. In this outbreak the agglutination reactions of the blood of the patients and the characteristics of the bacilli isolated showed the infection to be due to a typical strain of Bacillus enteritidis.

  40. Except in this single matter of agglutination reaction, no constant distinction between these varieties has been demonstrated.

  41. It is hoped that it will be possible to examine some of the survivors for agglutination from time to time.

  42. Having utilized the technic devised by Teague, I have had no difficulty in performing the agglutination test in plague.

  43. The agglutination test is of no value for the diagnosis of plague, as it was found positive only in convalescents.

  44. The non-fatal cases showed slight agglutination from the sixth day on.

  45. Animal inoculation was performed in every case, and the culture isolated from each case was identified by agglutination test, rabbit's immune serum being used.

  46. The rest of the blood was emptied into a sterile tube, and used for agglutination tests.

  47. From that day, the agglutination titer of the serum was found to rise, and the agglutinins persisted in the blood of convalescents up to the seventh week of the disease.


  48. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "agglutination" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.
    Other words:
    accession; adherence; adjunct; agglomeration; agglutination; aggregation; annexation; articulation; attachment; bond; cling; coherence; combination; communication; compression; concentration; concourse; concurrence; condensation; confluence; congeries; conglomeration; conjugation; conjunction; connection; consolidation; coupling; gathering; hardening; increase; inseparability; intercommunication; intercourse; joining; jointure; junction; juxtaposition; liaison; linkage; marriage; meeting; merger; merging; pairing; reinforcement; solidification; splice; supplementation; symbiosis; tie; unification; union; uniting