No information seems to be given regarding its composition except such as is contained in the following vague and uninforming phrases: “Effervescent saline combination, hepatic stimulant, laxative and an eliminant of irritating toxins.
His magic power over the enraged populace of Paris during the Three Days' Revolution of 1830 has no parallel when we consider the effervescent nature of the French people.
The French is the most effervescent nation known to history.
He well knew that effervescent popularity was not an index of that substantial usefulness which lives long after that transient vapor consigns its ephemeral subjects to the mellow repose of peaceful oblivion.
The stony soil hereabouts is said to be better adapted to the cultivation of white than of black grapes; besides which, the wines of Le Mesnil are remarkable for their effervescent properties.
Only in the wine from white grapes is the effervescentprinciple retained to any particular extent; but, on the other hand, the wine from black grapes imparts both quality and vinous character to the blend.
Giesler do not usually consign the newly-bottled wine at once to the cellars, but retain it above-ground for about a fortnight, in order that it may develop its effervescent qualities more perfectly.
Mr Toots was sure to hail this with a burst of chuckles, like the opening of a bottle of some effervescent beverage.
With these and another bottle of the effervescent wine, how brightly the evening will pass away by the blazing wood fire!
Effervescent salts are mixtures of active constituents with sodium bicarbonate, citric acid and tartaric acid.
An effervescent well-intentioned set of Senators; too combustible, where continual sparks are flying!
Jourgniac de Saint Meard has seen battle, has seen an effervescent Regiment du Roi in mutiny; but the bravest heart may quail at this.
The process of undergoing an effervescent change, as by the action of yeast; in a wider sense (Physiol.
The air was neither cool nor warm, effervescent merely, brisk and full of the smell of grass and of the sea.
Now, he said with a laugh, he must also properly expose their misbehavior; he must, anticipating all other reports, describe the whole thing naturally as an extravagance inspired by the new and effervescent wine.
The priest stood by her side, Fraeulein Perini was pouring an effervescent powder into a glass.
Their joy and their triumph was complete, and with a good night's rest and the beautiful morning air to refresh them, their spirits were effervescent in the extreme.
The little township "ran" a journal of its own, and though not so effervescent as The Lyre of Ladysmith, it had its humorous side.
Sal Hepatica, then, is a simple effervescent saline laxative, essentially secret in composition and sold under claims that would be laughed at were the full formula of the product a matter of public knowledge.
It is similar to the effervescentartificial Carlsbad Salt described in the National Formulary.
Chemical Laboratory reports that Alkalithia is an effervescent mixture which contains alkaline carbonates and bicarbonates together with caffein, free tartaric acid and free citric acid.
Granular Effervescent Bromide and Acetanilid Compound-Mulford is listed in the Appendix to New and Nonofficial Remedies.
The period of acceptance having expired for Granular Effervescent Bromide and Acetanilid Compound-Mulford, the Council directed its omission from New and Nonofficial Remedies for conflict with Rule 10.
How many years, and through what changes of fortune and various calamity, had that bottle hoarded up its effervescent joy, to be quaffed at last by two such boon companions!
It was apparently impregnated with an effervescent gas, for little bubbles were continually ascending from the depths of the glasses, and bursting in silvery spray at the surface.
She could there and then, in effervescent thankfulness, have knelt to worship all the infinitesimal saintlings of whom her lover had never heard, but who, with her, were active pioneers to mercy.
The sameeffervescent passions form a Catiline or a Cicero.
This atom in creation then describes his oval and full face; his fiery and eloquent eyes: his vermil lips; his robust constitution, and his effervescent passions.
If she tired of these, she should have recourse to granulated citrate of magnesia as a cooling effervescent drink, and have a mustard poultice applied on the pit of the stomach—these were verbal directions.
But though the acute strain and distress, the piteous terror had dulled, her heart ached always with its burden, and there were many times when all of Mrs. Spottiswoode's effervescent moods could not call forth response.
Well-fermented forty-eight-hours-old keffir should be an effervescentbeverage with prickling and acid taste and a consistency and smell similar to sour cream.
Keffir becomes slightly effervescent in twenty-four hours, and in that time develops a small quantity of alcohol, but after three days the amount of alcohol and lactic acid is much increased.
It is a matter that disturbs me strangely; it isn't an effervescent temperament, a boiling of the blood, the first glow of virility.
The process of undergoing an effervescent change, as by the action of yeast; in a wider sense (Physiol.
Defn: An effervescent liquor like kumiss, made from fermented milk, used as a food and as a medicine in the northern Caucasus.
Defn: A light-colored highly effervescent beer made by the top- fermentation process.
The calcined Magnesia being a non-effervescent may be united with acids under this form without any other inconvenience than their producing a neutral salt, and the propriety of this change must depend on the intention of the prescriber.
Slips of linen cloth dipped in very rancid oil, had their rancidity much diminished by exposure to a stream of fixed air from aneffervescent mixture of chalk and spirit of vitriol.
Keeping the wine for a few years is said materially to improve its quality, to the sacrifice, however, of its effervescent properties.
Time and the iconoclasts of the great Revolution have spared but little of the royal abbey of St. Peter where Dom Perignon lighted upon his happy discovery of the effervescent quality of champagne.
Giesler do not usually consign the newly-bottled wine at once to the cellars, but retain it aboveground for about a fortnight in order that it may develop its effervescent qualities more perfectly.
The stony soil hereabouts is said to be better adapted to the cultivation of white than of black grapes, besides which the wines of Le Mesnil are remarkable for their effervescent properties.
A pressure of 5¾ atmospheres constitutes what is styled a “grand mousseux,” and the wine exhibiting it may be safely conveyed to the coolest subterranean depths, for no doubt need be entertained as to its future effervescent properties.
He found out the way of making an effervescent wine--a wine that burst out of the bottle and overflowed the glass, that was twice as dainty to the taste, and twice as exhilarating in its effects.
In addition to the well-known Clairette, some of the wine-growers of Die make sparkling white and rose-coloured muscatels of superior quality, which retain their effervescent properties for several years.
By piling up a large number of independent and seemingly irreconcilable melodic themes one on top of the other, a marvellous effervescent polyphony is procured.
For although he honestly endeavored to fathom the profundity of his illustrious father, the subtle influence of his courtly surroundings and the effervescentsuperficiality of Neapolitanism could not but have its effect upon his art.
Frequently carried away by desire for pomp and effervescent personal glory, he nevertheless gave the art of dramatic scoring a powerful impetus toward modern methods.
It is yet too early to judge whether the fame of Gustave Charpentier (1860) is destined to be effervescent or enduring.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "effervescent" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.