Just because it does so, it has always been felt to be of critical importance, alike by those who welcome and by those who reject it; it condenses and concentrates in itself the attraction of Christ and the offence of Christ.
It condenses in itself a whole cycle of his characteristic thoughts.
This vapour gradually cools down, and ultimately condenses into a star, or a cluster of stars.
The astronomer's life is not long enough, the life of the human race might not be long enough, to watch the process by which a nebula condenses down so as to form a solid body.
That is to say, as the great heat disappears, the moisture condenses and the clouds form.
As the steam strikes the cold kettle or iron, it condenses and forms drops of water.
Then the water vapor in itcondenses into droplets of water, and these form a cloud.
As the steam condenses and leaves a vacuum, the air pressure forces the balloon into the flask.
If the outside air is cold, your breath is cooled; so some of the water vapor in it condenses into very small droplets, and you see your breath.
And all this is accounted for by the simple fact that when water evaporates its vapor mingles with the air; and when this vapor is sufficiently cooled it condenses and forms droplets of water.
When warm air is cooled while it is down around us, the water vapor in it condenses into myriads of droplets that float in the air and make it foggy.
That which prevents this from really happening is very simple: In the world as it is, water vapor condenses and changes to drops of water whenever it gets cool enough.
And as in the case of the rising warm air, the water vapor condenses when it cools, and forms the mist that you see.
Footnote 3: What you see is really not the steam, but the vapor formed as the steam condenses in the cool room.
Then when this air passes over a cold current, the cold current cools the air so much that the moisture in it condenses and forms fog.
That heated air may be very moist, and yet the moisture so equally diffused and rarefied as not to be visible till colder air mixes with it, when it condenses and becomes visible.
The end of pipe A dips below the surface of the water, which condenses most of the tar and steam.
The cold surface condenses the water suspended in the warm breath.
The soaked seal-skin clothing freezes at once in the air, and damp condenses on the hair in frost-blossoms.
The breath condenses over the face and upon the sloping tent-side, in long snow-webs, which fall at the slightest movement.
The vapour of the acid is led away by the tube D into a series of two-necked earthenware receivers called bonbonnes (E), and there condenses to a liquid.
When this operation is carried out in a vessel attached to a condenser, the vapour that is given off from the melted soda condenses to a clear colourless liquid which, on examination, proves to be water.
If a little fly-stone is mixed with some formiate of soda, and heated in the bulb, the arsenic is reduced, volatilized, and condenses in the cool portion of the tube.
Volatilizes sometimes leaving a slight earthy residue, and re-condenses as a black sulphide.
If a piece of paper is heated in the bulb, a dark colored oil condenses upon the sides of the tube, which has a strong empyreumatic odor.
Heated with carbonate of soda in a glass tube closed at one end, they are reduced to metallic mercury, which is volatilized, and condenses upon a cool portion of the tube as a grey powder.
After a short time, the temperature is increased to a low red heat, at which the arsenious acid is reduced and the metallic arsenic sublimed, and which re-condenses in the neck of the bulb.
Ignited in an open glass tube, it burns slowly with a white vapor, which condenses upon the cool part of the tube, and exhibits some indications of crystallization.
If Hg be present, it is sublimed and condenses in the tube in small drops.
He first analyzes and condenses the works of each writer, and then sums up the opinions on each country and phase of the subject.
He condenses the early Mexican history in his Mexico, i.
He condenses the arguments for a recent origin of man.
But Linnaeus condenses it all in the word tricornis, which, although not fully descriptive, is still a name which all future observers can use and recognize.
When thus freed and examined in normal saline, I have found by rough estimates that it condensessunlight to a bright point a distance back of the lens of from one-fourth to one-half its diameter.
It makes as hard a surface as tin foil, and can be cut, polished, and burnished so that it is smooth and looks well; it can be used in temporary or chalky teeth, as a small amount of force condenses it.
In the eight-horse engine already partly explained, k is the cylinder of an air-pump to remove any air, and the water which condenses the steam, from the condenser L.
If the bottle is cold the iodinecondenses in minute and brilliant crystals.
The clever playlet writer is advertised by the ease--the simplicity--with which he condenses every bit of the exposition into the opening speeches.
You therefore naturally and rightly come to the conclusion that far more vapour rises out of the ground during the night than condenses as dew on the grass, and that this vapour from the ground is trapped by the tray.
Magnesia dust has small affinity for water-vapour; accordingly, it condenses at almost exactly the same temperature as the glass.
The burnt sulphur condenses in the air to very fine particles, and the quantity of burnt sulphur is enormous.
It permits of a continuous supply of hot water to the still, so that the contents of the latter may always be kept boiling rapidly, and as a consequence it condenses the maximum amount of water with the minimum of loss of heat.
When the clouds are overcharged with moisture in cold climates or in cold weather, the vapour freezes as it condenses and forms snow, which under the microscope presents a series of the most beautiful star-like crystals (fig.
In other words, when a liquid evaporates a certain amount of heat disappears, or becomes latent and when the vapor condenses the heat reappears, or becomes sensible heat.
If the cooling of the atmosphere is at the surface of some cold object which lowers the temperature of the air below its saturation point, some of its moisture condenses and collects upon the cold surface as dew.
Where the vapor strikes the side of the tube, it condensesback to dark gray crystals of iodine.
The compressor exhausts ammonia gas from the coiled pipe in "E" and compresses the gas in "C," where under 150 pounds pressure and the cooling effect of water it condenses to liquid ammonia.
As we have seen, the existence of nuclei in the air serves to explain why, when the conditions of temperature and humidity are right, moisture condenses in the tiny droplets that constitute clouds.
If we breathe on a knife-blade, it condenses in the same manner the moisture of the breath, and becomes covered with a film of water.
A cabbage, which at night is very cold, condenses water to the amount of a gill or more.
Plutarch, in a later period, condenses a library of lesser writers.
He finds affinities, relationships, analogies everywhere, but at the same time he condenses and sums up what is elsewhere scattered.
Perhaps I may boil the water; if I do boil the water, I shall get steam; and you know that steam condenses when it gets cold, and you will therefore see by that whether I do boil the water or not.
Anything wooden or metallic, especially anything metallic, brought into the house immediately condenses the moisture with which the warm interior atmosphere is laden and becomes in a few moments covered with frost.
At this time of year the covering of the nose involves a fresh annoyance, for it deflects the breath upward, and the moisture of it continually condenses on the snow glasses, which means continual wiping.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "condenses" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.