The best method of collecting it is to make several superficial, longitudinal incisions in the green fruit without removing it from the tree; immediately an abundance of juice appears in the incisions and coagulates rapidly.
The milky juice is neutral and coagulates rapidly, separating in two parts: a kind of insoluble pulp and a limpid colorless serum.
Combined with milk it coagulates it and soon precipitates the casein which is also dissolved a little later.
In a very short time the blood coagulates and forms a temporary plug until the vessels themselves become permanently sealed by a similar process.
The casein of the cow's milkcoagulates in one solid mass, and is much less easily penetrated by the digesting fluids than the fine, flaky coagula of woman's or mare's milk.
In a tolerably concentrated solution it coagulates albumen and acts as an astringent.
The yield of milk diminishes, and when heated it coagulates slightly.
If there is a free exit most of the blood runs off; the rest stays in the wound, where it soon coagulates with the exceptions mentioned above.
It acts as a strong base, precipitating the oxides of metals and alkaline earths from their solutions, and it coagulates albumen.
It coagulates albumen, the precipitate being soluble in an excess of albumen; it also dissolves iodine, without changing its properties.
In Bengal the manufacturers boil the oil water, whichcoagulates some albumen, and they subsequently filter through cloth, charcoal, and paper.
The water dissolves the mucilage and starch, and the heat coagulates the albumen, which forms a whitish layer between the oil and water.
The albuminous elements of the meat, which are similar in character to the white of an egg, are readily dissolved in cold or tepid water, but boiling water coagulates them.
In cooking, heat coagulates the albumen within and between the cells, while the starch granules absorb the watery portion, swell, and distend the cells.
The gastric juice softens the food, digests albumen, andcoagulates milk.
It is much thicker than ordinary milk, andcoagulates in boiling.
On opening them we find a triangular cavity filled with a limpid liquor, which coagulates by the fire, and becomes white like that contained in the vesicles.
It also coagulates both albumen and fibrine, converting them into a solid substance, thus rendering them unfit for the action of the solvent principles of the gastric juice.
Then the saline spirit unites itself to it and coagulates the earthy principle, which is always present, but often in the state of materia prima without being coagulated.
In like manner the moon of the microcosm, that is to say the brain, coagulates the blood.
When blood is allowed to stand, it coagulates and separates into a watery fluid called serum, and into the clot, which consists principally of fibrine.
When blood coagulates the white corpuscles sink more slowly and appear as a lighter coloured layer on the top of the clot.
Serum, when heated, coagulates into a white mass called albumen.
In preparing lactic acid from milk, the acid formed, after a time, coagulates and renders insoluble the casein, and the production of the acid ceases.
The milk of a woman who lives wholly on vegetable food acesces and coagulates with equal readiness and in a precisely similar manner to cows' milk.
When meat is roasted, the fire gradually coagulates the albumen of the joint, the coagulation commencing at the surface, and spreading by degrees to the interior.
Rennet coagulatesit like it does the casein of milk, its similarity to which is exemplified by the manufacture of a kind of cheese from peas and beans by the Chinese.
In severer forms of typhus, "when first drawn, it has a peculiar smell, and coagulates almost invariably without any crust.
Fourcroy, it is true, has shown that the foetal blood is not only of a darker colour, but incapable of becoming reddened by the contact of atmospheric air, and that it coagulates very imperfectly.
At the instant when the glutinous juice of the kiracaguero-tree is poured into the venomous liquor well concentrated, and kept in a state of ebullition, it blackens, and coagulates into a mass of the consistence of tar, or of a thick syrup.
When the blood thus coagulates in veins, changes may be produced analogous to those mentioned as occurring in serous cavities.
When blood coagulates in a serous cavity, a thin pellicle forms upon its surface, and, becoming thickened by deposition from the fibrin of the blood, forms a cyst, which completely circumscribes the effusion.
The reason why the liquor that rises first contains a great deal more Volatile Salt than the other, in so much that it coagulates and becomes solid, is because the Volatile Salt rises in distillation much more easily than water.
In this case the distillation begins with a humid vapour, which coagulates on the sides of the receiver into a concrete Salt, almost as soon as it comes over.
As soon as the alcohol touches the albumen the latter coagulates and becomes hard like boiled white of egg.
The other enzyme of gastric juice, called rennin, curdles or coagulates a protein found in milk; after the milk is curdled, the pepsin is able to act upon it.
If the protein is in a liquid state, its presence may be proved by heating, for when it coagulates or thickens, as does the white of an egg when boiled, protein in the form of an albumin is present.
Vinegar dissolves or coagulates the albumen of flesh, and thereby counteracts its putrescence.
It coagulates albumen, and prevents the putrefaction of butcher's meat and fish.
It forms about three fourths of the weight of the blood, has an alkaline reaction, coagulates at 167 deg.
It mixes with water in any proportion; and, when thus diluted, itcoagulates with heat and alcohol as before.
The yellow colouring matter still retained by the mixture coagulates immediately and precipitates, leaving the ox-gall perfectly purified and colourless.
The mother's milk coagulates in small flakes, easily acted upon by the digestive juices, after which they are readily absorbed.
Cow's milk coagulates into rather large pieces of albumin which are tough and therefore rather difficult to digest.
If it is insalivated it coagulates in smaller curds and is more easily digested, for the digestive juices can tear down small soft curds more easily than the large tough ones.
This coagulates the outer part of the piece of meat.
Natrum, which is of animal origin, by deliquescing coagulates lime.
Burdon Sanderson, that albumen coagulates at about 155o, but, in presence of acids, the temperature of coagulation is lower.
In a raw egg, the albumin is nearly liquid, but as heat is applied, it gradually coagulates until it becomes solid.
Whether the inner and middle coats are ruptured or not, blood coagulates both above and below the ligature, the proximal clot being longer and broader than that on the distal side.
When a wound is made in the integument under aseptic conditions, the passage of the knife through the tissues is immediately followed by an oozing of blood, which soon coagulates on the cut surfaces.
The object of tying the artery is to diminish or to arrest the flow of blood through the aneurysm so that the blood coagulates both in the sac and in the feeding artery.
The lightest way of dressing them is by poaching, which is effected by putting them for a minute or two into brisk boiling water: this coagulates the external white, without doing the inner part too much.
It is not only free from impurities, but it forms a sharp acid that acts readily upon the rennets and extracts more completely the pepsin, gastric juice, or whatever it may be that coagulates the milk.
The milk needs to work faster, and the acid, although it coagulates the milk, will not supply the place of the rennet.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "coagulates" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.