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Example sentences for "condense"

Lexicographically close words:
condenados; condensable; condensate; condensation; condensations; condensed; condenser; condensers; condenses; condensible
  1. My soul is slower: in a life I roll The minute out whereto you condense yours-- The whole slow circle round you I must move, To be just you.

  2. Well then, let me, the hollow rock, condense The voice o' the sea and wind, interpret you The mystery of this murder.

  3. Shelley, may I condense verbosity That lies before me, into some few words Of English, and illustrate your superb Achievement by a rescued anecdote, No great things, only new and true beside?

  4. Lastly, set it on hot coals with the lid off, that the steam may not condense upon it and render the rice watery.

  5. About ten minutes before the stew goes to table, take off the lid of the stew-pan, lest the steam should condense on it and clod the rice, or render it watery.

  6. If covered after boiling, the vapour will condense within the lid, and make the hominy thin and watery.

  7. The moisture at the crests of these waves may be cooled to such an extent as to condense into visible clouds, arranged in long continuous rolls or rows of detached patches; forms frequently assumed by cirro-cumulus and alto-cumulus.

  8. But as it requires less heat to vaporize alcohol than water, so it also requires more cold to condense alcoholic-vapor than water-vapor.

  9. It should then be wrapped up to a piece of canvas, or a skin, and pressed, with as heavy a pressure as can be obtained, to condense it.

  10. Opera glass as a night glass; supplies a burning lens; and a lens to condense light.

  11. It had become much colder, and I concluded that during the night the cloud-particles, if driven near by the wind, would condense into rain.

  12. This lunar indication, then, has a sound physical basis, showing that near the observer there are vast areas of clouds, which are reflecting light upon the moon at the time, before they condense into rain by the chilling of the air.

  13. If a kite be flown into a cloud, and made to give off electricity for some time, that cloud will begin to condense into rain.

  14. I condense here the accounts of his encounters with the Prince, who was on his way to be a hermit.

  15. Here Nature shall condense her powers, Her music, and her meteors, And lifting man to the blue deep Where stars their perfect courses keep, Like wise preceptor, lure his eye.

  16. They also condense with aldehydes, under the influence of alkalis or sodium ethylate (L.

  17. They condense with orthodiamines to form quinoxalines (O.

  18. Potassium has a much stronger affinity for oxygen than sodium, and must condense it much more; and the resulting higher specific gravity of the combination is a necessary consequence.

  19. The hydrogen of fuel and oxygen of air (liberated by combustion) combining together, condense into water.

  20. If the wind be colder than the clouds, it will condense their vapour into rain: if the wind be warmer than the clouds, it will dissolve them, and cause them to disappear.

  21. When the hydrogen of the tallow and oxygen of the air condense into water, a vacuum is made; and the air is disturbed, as a pond would be, if a pail of water were taken out.

  22. If the air be ever so moist, rain will never fall till cold air has been introduced to condense the vapour; and the moment that the cold air is introduced, the barometer will rise.

  23. When the oxygen of the air combines with the hydrogen of the fuel, the two gases condense into water; and latent heat is squeezed out, as water from a sponge.

  24. A cold current of wind will condense the invisible vapour of the air, and add it to the clouds as it passes by.

  25. Immediately the pie is drawn, the air in the cup begins to condense again, and occupy a smaller space; in consequence of which, there is no longer enough air to fill the cup, and so juice rushes in to fill up the deficiency.

  26. In winter the coldness of the air condenses our breath into visible vapour; but in summer the air is not cold enough to condense it into visible vapour.

  27. The air is not able to condense the steam as it first issues from the spout, but when it spreads and comes in contact with a larger volume of air, the invisible steam is readily condensed into visible drops.

  28. Why is the glass window COLD enough to condense the vapour of the carriage?

  29. Because the glass becomes of the same temperature as the air of the room, and will no longer chill the vapour which touches it, and condense it into mist.

  30. I must condense so much of the tale as may suffice to indicate the nature and extent of the Poet's obligations.

  31. In summer the light vapours which are raised above the summit of these mountains fall in the form of dew, whereas in winter they condense and fall in snow or ice, which in winter may raise considerable winds, even at that height.

  32. To render a reason for this phenomena we may suppose that the clouds being collected in one part by opposite winds, they force them by pressing them with violence to condense and descend in this manner.

  33. We would condense into our momentary existence the transactions of ages past and to come, without reflecting that this instant of time, nay even human life itself, is only a single fact in the history of the acts of the Almighty.

  34. Perhaps it is not impossible to condense into a single proposition the whole meaning of this chapter, and of several others that preceded it.

  35. One may see a vague cloud condense and diminish into a head or arm or a whole figure of a man, or to some animal shape.

  36. The first set of undulations which are produced immediately around the sonorous body, by pressing against the contiguous air, condense it.

  37. We scarcely know which is most admirable; the cleverness that contrives to condense so many misstatements into so few words, or this tone of candour, conviction, and philanthropical exultation.

  38. We believe it possible to condense the leading features within the compass of a single sentence.

  39. If we dissolve a salt in water, if we mix two fluids together, if we condense a gas, or convert a fluid into vapour, electricity is disturbed, and may be made manifest to our senses.

  40. Considerations of space compel me here, as in other cases, to condense the stories; but I conscientiously and purposely retain all the sentimental passages and expressions.

  41. It would take considerable ingenuity to condense into an equal number of lines a greater amount of ignorance and naïveté than this passage includes.

  42. Surely it would be difficult to condense into so few lines more facts and conditions abhorrent to the Christian conception of the sanctity of love than is done in this passage.

  43. I have tried repeatedly to condense the essential traits of romantic love into one brief definition, but have not succeeded.

  44. But then you would have to mind where you held your hand; because where the steam began to condense again, it would be boiling hot.

  45. He has aimed to condense these abundant materials within the limits of a single volume, retaining every thing of practical importance in the works from which they are derived.

  46. I am very glad at what you say about my Abstract, but you may rely on it that I will condense to the utmost.

  47. I am now employed in writing a paper on the subject, which I find very amusing work, excepting that I cannot anyhow condense it into reasonable limits.

  48. He could condense cerulean ether Into the very best sole-leather.

  49. An apparatus of this kind is designed to take the exhaust steam from the engine and condense it, and from the condenser it is again returned to the boiler.

  50. Why not condense the steam discharged from the engine cylinder?


  51. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "condense" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.
    Other words:
    abbreviate; abridge; abstract; accelerate; aggravate; brief; cake; candy; capsule; circumscribe; clip; coagulate; compact; complicate; compress; concentrate; concrete; condense; consolidate; constrict; contract; cram; cramp; crop; crowd; crystallize; curdle; curtail; cut; decrease; deepen; digest; diminish; distill; dock; double; draw; dribble; drip; drop; dwindle; edit; enhance; epitomize; exaggerate; extract; filter; foreshorten; granulate; gurgle; heighten; intensify; jam; knit; magnify; narrow; nip; nutshell; outline; percolate; poll; press; prune; pucker; purse; ramify; reap; recapitulate; redouble; reduce; reinforce; retrench; seep; sharpen; shave; shear; shorten; shrink; sketch; snub; solidify; squeeze; strangle; strengthen; stunt; sum; summarize; sweat; telescope; thicken; trickle; trim; triple; truncate; weep; whet; wrinkle