Charcoal: to prevent fetor of stools, accumulation of fetid gas, and to disinfect stools after passage.
If not actually homesome, the fetor bespoke a possible drink.
The tail is stained by the liquid dejections, which are at first simply soft and mixed with mucus with a sour odor, accompanied with a peculiar and characteristic fetor (suggesting rotten cheese), which continually grows worse.
The color of the feces, at first yellow, becomes a lighter grayish yellow or a dirty white (hence the name white scour), and the fetor becomes intolerable.
When it is mixed with these substances their fetor is immediately destroyed, and a compost produced, which may be substituted for guano for agricultural purposes.
As disinfecting agents, they are probably useless, and are relics of an ancient custom of burning frankincense and other odorous substances in vitiated air, to overcome the fetor which is more or less present.
Of this Saynt Ierom, the haly man, Says thus, als I here shewe yhow can: Ibi est ignis inextinguibilis, et fetor intollerabilis.
A thick slough covers the sore, and its fetor is peculiar and intolerable.
In respect to the fetor attending copious continued sweats, it is owing to the animalized part of this fluid being kept in that degree of warmth, which most favours putrefaction, and not suffered to exhale into the atmosphere.
Yet a solution of alum injected frequently by a syringe is perhaps to be preferred, as it immediately removes the fetor of the breath, which must much injure the patient by its being perpetually received into the lungs by respiration.
In the chronic form of the affection, especially as it occurs in the adult, the alterations of taste, the saburral coatings of the tongue, and the fetor of the breath are more marked than in the acute form.
Should gangrene of the mucous membrane take place, there will be great fetor from the mouth, and some danger of hemorrhage on detachment of the sloughs should the process be taking place in the direction of vessels of some calibre.
The fetor of the breath, however, the profuse salivation, and the chemical reaction of the saliva, together with the history of exposure to mercury, soon place the nature of the case beyond doubt.
Chronic stomatitis may be mistaken for mere indication of gastric catarrh, which is likewise attended with loss of appetite, fetor of breath, and coating of the tongue.
The principal subjective symptoms of mercurial stomatitis are--characteristic fetor of the breath, sore gums and mouth, continuous nauseous metallic brassy or coppery taste, and profuse salivation.
As the fetor of these abscesses is horrible, they should be injected with a solution of permanganate of potash or liq.
When fetor exists, as during the detachment of patches of exudation, antiseptic and detergent sprays may be employed.
The characteristic fetor often ceases within twelve hours' use of this drug.
In the yard there was less fetor than there had been outside.
By the use of this the ulcers will quickly heal; the fetor will be removed, and the deposition of the tartar prevented.
In cattle, before there has been fetor attending the discharge, or the constitution has been materially affected, these simple means will perfectly succeed.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "fetor" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word. Other words: aroma; miasma; odor; reek; reeking; smell; stench; stink