A seed is a highly carbonized body, consisting of integuments and embryo: between these, in most seeds, lies a substance called the albumen, or perisperm.
This arises from the destructive distillation of imperfectly carbonized organic matter.
Carbon in the elementary form has its nearest representative in the carbonized fuels, charcoal from wood and coke from coal.
There is thus no means of emptying it, and the water probably becomes carbonized and unfit for oxygenizing the blood, so that the whole of the respiration is thus thrown on the branchiƦ.
This will account for the fact that when the fish is in a state of quiescence, it lives much longer than when excited, whilst the sluggishness sometimes evinced may be due to poisoned or carbonized blood.
The retorts in which the coal is carbonized are almost universally made of fire-clay, and in all but small country works the old single-ended retort, which was about 9 ft.
As much as one-third on each ton of coal carbonized is saved by the use of machinery in the retort-house.
If the machine be fitted with metal strip brushes, frayed ends should be clipped square with a pair of shears, the ends thoroughly cleaned from any dirt or carbonized oil, and replaced in their holders.
If the contact faces of the brushes are very dirty and covered with a coating of carbonized oil, etc.
If the contact faces of the brushes be fused or covered with carbonized oil, dirt, etc.
Nearly two thousand actual rolls were discovered at Herculaneum, of course in a highly-carbonized condition, and of them some hundreds have been unrolled.
And, in the anthracitic coals, this process appears to have gone to such a length, as to destroy the original structure altogether, and to replace it by a completely carbonized substance.
At one time Edison employed a filament of bamboo, carbonized after being bent into a horse-shoe shape.
This deposited carbon is not only much more dense than ordinary carbonized organic material, but it has a much lower specific electric resistance.
The burners are of special construction, provided with a very thick wick which is in the first instance treated in such a manner as to cause the formation of a deposit of carbonized tar on its exposed upper surface.
The long thread thus obtained, when hardened, is a semi-transparent substance resembling cat-gut, and when carefully carbonized at a high temperature gives a very dense and elastic form of carbon filament.
According to the different degrees of heat applied, the plants were obtained in a brown or perfectly carbonized condition; and sometimes, but more rarely, they were in a black shining state, adhering closely to the layer of clay.
He next sent a boy to buy a reel of cotton, and told his assistants he was going to see what a carbonizedthread would do.
The mould was opened and the carbonized thread removed.
I began to try various things, and finally I carbonized a strip of bamboo from a Japanese fan, and saw that I was on the right track.
Then a battle began that lasted for two days and two nights, the object of which was to get a carbonized thread that would not break.
Well, we sent out and bought some cotton thread, carbonized it, and made the first filament.
He could not conceivably guess that deep down in the interior of the insanely growing hills, pressure had killed and oxidation had carbonized the once-living material.
The great fires grew and spread in the masses of ready-carbonized mushroom.
Oddly enough, a few years later, some inventor actually took out a patent for making incandescent lamps with carbonized hair for filaments!
This conductor was a strip of carbonized paper about an inch long, one-sixteenth of an inch broad, and six or seven one-thousandths of an inch thick, the ends of which were secured to clamps that formed the poles of a battery.
Not only were the ordinary strip paper carbons tried again, but tissue-paper coated with tar and lampblack was rolled into thin sticks, like knitting-needles, carbonized and raised to incandescence in vacuo.
This horseshoe of carbonized paper seemed incapable to resist mechanical shocks and to maintain incandescence for any considerable length of time.
As the molten metal flowed into the mould, it forced the fabric firmly against the sand wall, and when the casting was removed, the carbonized fabric was stripped off from its face without injury.
In this way several castings have been made from one carbonized material.
Finally, on October 21, he carbonized a piece of cotton thread and put it in his vacuum globe in the form of a horseshoe loop.
At last he hit upon a filament made of carbonized Japanese bamboo that was very successful for a number of years, but this was later superseded by a cellulose mixture mechanically pressed out by dies.
The carbonized cotton thread filament had many drawbacks, and Edison continued carbonizing various fabrics and fibres, including, it is said, some of the red hairs out of the beard of one of his loyal staff!
There is a narrow carbonized strip, slightly in from the bowl end, which runs around the pipe; this appears to be the remnant of a cord that had been tied around it.
A partially carbonized plug of matted coarse fibers also fills the mouth end of the smaller pipe.
The mouth end is filled by a plug of partially carbonized matted coarse fibers.
In hot climates, obviously, less carbonized food is required to keep up the necessary temperature of the body than in cold climates.
The people whose climate makes carbonized food a necessity, are obliged to call into action their bolder and stronger faculties in order to obtain their supplies, while the vegetable-eater may tranquilly rest on bounteous nature.
One pair of Shears; carbonized steel blades, hardened edge, nickel-plated, heavy brass nut and bolt.
Various forms of thread have been carbonizedand used.
One pair of Shears; carbonized steel blades, hardened edges, nickel plated, heavy brass nut and bolt.
The filaments used have been made of every form of carbonized vegetable matter.
Lignite, or brown coal, an imperfectlycarbonized vegetable deposit of more recent geological age than true coal.
Now this carbonized vegetation of a past age, the history of which has been briefly sketched in the foregoing pages, is one of the chief sources of our industrial supremacy as a nation.
Not only did he try ordinary strips of carbonized paper, but tissue-paper coated with tar and lampblack was rolled into thin sticks, like knitting-needles, carbonized and raised to the white heat of incandescence in vacuo.
He had a bushy red beard, and was persuaded to give a few hairs to be carbonized and used for filaments in experimental lamps.
In this globe there is a tiny carbon filament, manufactured of carbonized thread, in the form of a loop, which is attached to two platinum wires which project through the glass bulb.
In his case the carbon filament is formed of carbonized bamboo, and the glass bulb is of an elongated form.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "carbonized" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.