The warm breath and insensible perspiration of the persons riding in the carriage, load the air of it with warm vapour.
The breath and insensible perspiration of the sleeper (coming in contact with the ice-cold window) is frozen by the cold glass, and forms those beautiful appearances seen in our bed-rooms in a winter morning.
The insensible perspiration of the hot hand is condensed upon the cold glass, and thus made perceptible.
When the body is exhausted by insensible perspiration, the most requisite aliment is that which can equally restore the loss of the solids and the languid flow of the animal spirits.
And that therefore the principal use of diaphoretic medicines is to warm the skin, and thence in consequence to produce the natural degree of insensible perspiration in languid habits.
To pass off in the form of vapor or insensible perspiration; to exhale.
You will very soon have an astonishing outflow of insensible perspiration, but it passes off through the soft porous flannel without any obstruction whatever.
A damp flannel bandage placed round the lower half of the body all night for a few nights will produce a remarkable increase of insensible perspiration, and in many case forms a good substitute for sweating drugs.
Acetic acid, or white-wine vinegar, rubbed over the skin, produces a similar increase of insensible perspiration, and may be used without fear of injury.
In the ordinary state of the skin, even when there is no apparent perspiration, it is constantly exhaling waste matter, in a form which is called insensible perspiration, because it cannot be perceived by the senses.
Insensible perspiration is most abundant during sleep, after eating, and when friction is applied to the skin.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "insensible perspiration" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.