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Example sentences for "cottonseed"

Lexicographically close words:
cottiers; cotton; cottonade; cottoned; cottons; cottontail; cottontails; cottonwood; cottonwoods; cottony
  1. Cottonseed meal is cheapest in the south and the southwest where cotton is widely grown.

  2. What I personally worry about is cottonseed oil.

  3. Purchased in garden stores in small containers it is very expensive; bought by the 50-to 80-pound sack from feed stores or farm coops, cottonseed meal and other oil seed meals are quite inexpensive.

  4. However, the chemical process used to extract cottonseed oil is very efficient The ground seeds are mixed with a volatile solvent similar to ether and heated under pressure in giant retorts.

  5. I avoid prepared salad dressings that may contain cottonseed oil, as well as many types of corn and potato chips, tinned oysters, and other prepared food products.

  6. Therefore it takes 24 sacks of steer manure to equal the nitrogen contained in two sacks of cottonseed meal.

  7. Cottonseed meal is particularly excellent for this purpose because it is a dry, flowing, odorless material that stores well.

  8. If you still fear that cottonseed meal is also a dangerous product then you certainly won't want to be eating feedlot beef or drinking milk or using other dairy products from cattle fed on cottonseed meal.

  9. I also suggest that you peek into the back of your favorite Oriental and fast food restaurants and see if there aren't stacks of ten gallon cottonseed oil cans waiting to fill the deep-fat fryer.

  10. Cottonseed meal is one of this country's major oil seed residues.

  11. I suspect that cottonseed meal from the southwest may be better endowed with trace minerals than that from leached-out southeastern soils or soy meal from depleted midwestern farms.

  12. Some organic certification bureaucracies foolishly prohibit or discourage the use of cottonseed meal as a fertilizer.

  13. Ten per cent oil of tar in Beaumont oil or in cottonseed oil was found to be safe and efficacious by Graybill.

  14. Feeds containing mineral salts, such as beans, cowpeas, oats, and cottonseed meal, may prove beneficial in replenishing the bony substance that is being absorbed.

  15. Cottonseed meal is one of the best feeds for this purpose, but it should be fed carefully.

  16. The emulsion is said to be made of equal parts of beef-fat, coconut, peanut and cottonseed oils, held in suspension by albumin.

  17. But the company adds 10 drops of eucalyptol and some cottonseed oil to this peerless product and an improvement is born--“Firolyptol”!

  18. The assertion that cottonseed oil is an especially valuable form of fat is without warrant, but even if it were true the fat is available in cheap and palatable forms in numerous other cottonseed oil products.

  19. Cottonseed meal is one of the best feeds for this purpose, but it should be fed carefully, as too large quantities of it are injurious to cows.

  20. Mixtures of cottonseed oil and pine tar containing from 10 to 50 per cent of the latter substance were found by investigations in the Bureau of Animal Industry to have a marked repellent action against flies when applied lightly every day.

  21. Feed rich in mineral salts may be given, such as beans, cowpeas, oats, cottonseed meal, or wheat bran.

  22. In the United States this product is now made of oleo oil or soft beef fat, neutral lard, cottonseed and other oils, churned with a small quantity of milk, and in the finer grades, cream is sometimes used.

  23. Marse David had de grown mens go sweep up de cottonseed in de ginhouse on Sunday mornin', and for three Sundays us went to school.

  24. Us made a fire wid cottonseed to smoke de meat.

  25. In a very great measure the beans have the same properties as cottonseed, an oil being extracted that is used for much the same purposes as cottonseed oil, while the residue called "bean cake" is about the equivalent of cottonseed meal.

  26. It is somewhat superior, Mr. Parker says, to cottonseed meal or linseed meal as a stock feed, but is now chiefly used for fertilizing purposes.

  27. Corn meal, wheat bran, and cottonseed meal in the proportion of 2, 1, and 1 parts.

  28. Corn or barley meal, cottonseed meal, and wheat or rice bran, fed in equal proportions.

  29. Cottonseed meal may be safely mixed with the soil, like ground bone, but requires some time in which to rot, before the plant can make use of it.

  30. Raw linseed oil 75% Cottonseed oil 25% No.

  31. Like cottonseed oil, it belongs more properly to the soap oil class.

  32. Raw linseed oil 50% Cottonseed oil 50% No.

  33. It has a lower drying value than cottonseed oil, and its use in the paint industry will probably be limited to color grinding, where an oil with a semi-drying value is often desired.

  34. The seeds from which the oil has been expressed constitute the cottonseed cake, used as a nutritious cattle fodder.

  35. The seeds yield the cottonseed oil, which is not unlike olive oil.

  36. For poorer grades of tallow, house grease, poor cottonseed oil, etc.

  37. Quantities of Alkali Required for Saponification of Fats of Average Molecular Weight 860 (Tallow, Cottonseed Oil, Olive Oil, Etc.

  38. The softer and cheaper oils like fish oil, linseed oil, cottonseed oil, etc.

  39. For good stock such as clean tallow, prime cottonseed oil, corn oil, cocoanut oil and stock of this kind 0.

  40. Cottonseed Cake is one of the most valuable feeding stuffs that have come into use of late years.

  41. The necessity for such a law arises from the growing use as stock foods of various by-products in the manufacture of liquors, starch, glucose, sugar, cottonseed and linseed oils and breakfast foods.

  42. The presence of cottonseed oil is indicated by a deep-red or orange color, little or no color resulting in its absence.

  43. Lard from hogs fed on any of the various cottonseed products may give a faint reaction when this test is applied.

  44. The commonest adulterant probably is cottonseed oil.

  45. Lard and lard oil from animals fed on cottonseed meal may give a faint reaction.

  46. Foreign fats like cottonseed oil, sesame oil, or oleomargarine may be substituted for or added to pure butter.

  47. In addition to the fiber, cottonseed oil, a substitute for olive oil, is made from the seeds, and the refuse remaining makes an excellent cattle fodder.

  48. We are shipping cottonseed oil also, but this requires tank-steamers, which are scarce.

  49. Fodder such as cottonseed press-cake cannot be shipped in large amounts as it takes three times as much shipping to transport feed as it does the meat made by the animals from it.

  50. Prepared from cottonseed oil and potassium hydroxide.

  51. A 25% addition of cottonseed oil will be 1° lower.

  52. It is an inexpensive little instrument, and for testing turpentine it is unsurpassed, while for the detection of cottonseed and mineral oil in linseed oil it is a quick and active agent.

  53. Cottonseed oil under the ammonia treatment shows an opaque brown.

  54. Cottonseed oil belongs to the non-drying class of oils, but since recent processes have made possible the elimination of the pronounced acrid taste, its presence in linseed oil by the sense of taste is not easy to expose.

  55. Into each of 6 test tubes put 2 teaspoonfuls of butter, cottonseed oil, corn oil, beef drippings, lard, and Crisco.

  56. Pour a little corn or cottonseed oil into a test tube, add the same quantity of water, and shake the tube.

  57. It usually consists of coconut oil combined with cottonseed or peanut oil.

  58. Sometimes butter and cottonseed and peanut oils are added.

  59. Refined cottonseed and corn oils are bland in flavor.

  60. Cottonseed oil makes a better substitute for olive oil then does corn oil as it is at present refined.

  61. The refined cottonseed oils now on the market are excellent.

  62. For deep fat frying several preparations are made from cottonseed oil that are agreeable to use and of moderate price.

  63. Preserving in oil is made familiar to us by the sardine of Italy in olive oil and the small herring of America in cottonseed oil, which also bears the name of sardine.

  64. We find nearly the opposite of this in cottonseed oil, a large supply and a relatively smaller demand making a low price.

  65. The cheaper grades are sometimes adulterated with corn oil or cottonseed oil, which have the same food value but should, of course, be sold under their own names and not at olive oil prices.

  66. As early as 1830, furthermore a beginning was made in extracting cottonseed oil for use both in painting and illumination, and also in utilizing the by-product of cottonseed meal as a cattle feed.

  67. The cottonseed and peanut oils have replaced the original oleo oil and the tropical oils from the coconut (copra) and African palm are crowding out the animal hard fats.

  68. If you will examine a cottonseed you will see first that there is a fine fuzz of cotton fiber sticking to it.

  69. The refined oil from the germ is marketed as a table or cooking oil under the name of "Mazola" and comes into competition with olive, peanut and cottonseed oil in the making of vegetable substitutes for lard and butter.

  70. The kernel of the cottonseed on being pressed yields a yellow oil and leaves a mealy cake.

  71. Before the war Germany got half of the Egyptian cottonseed and half of the Philippine copra.

  72. Denmark imports cottonseed meal and margarine and exports her butter.

  73. Cottonseed is separated into oil and meal; the oil going to make margarin and the meal going to feed the cows that produce butter.

  74. These are formed by the action of sulfuric acid on coconut, castor, cottonseed or mineral oils.

  75. The copra is half fat and can be cheaply shipped to America, where it can be crushed in the southern oilmills when they are not busy on cottonseed or peanuts.


  76. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "cottonseed" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.