An azotised substance, forming the coagulable portion of fresh-drawn blood, and the principal constituent of the muscular or fleshy parts of animals.
An azotised substance, forming a large proportion of the white pulp of both bitter and sweet almonds.
A peculiar azotised substance contained in malt, which effects the conversion of starch, first into dextrin, and then into grape sugar.
They all contain albuminous or azotised principles, which in a moist state putrefy and suffer decomposition.
It is a brown azotised substance, which, when treated by nitric acid, affords no mucic acid, but oxalic acid and the bitter principle of Welter.
To purify it still further, especially from the azotised matter, we should dissolve it in water, and precipitate again with alcohol.
The yellow dust of hops contains, moreover, traces of a fatty matter, gum, a small quantity of an azotised substance, and several saline combinations in minute quantity.
The two great classes of organic bodies (azotised and non-azotised) are readily distinguished from each other by heating a small portion with some solid hydrate of potassium, in a test tube.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "azotised" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.