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Example sentences for "inspissated"

Lexicographically close words:
inspireth; inspiring; inspirit; inspirited; inspiriting; inst; instability; instal; install; installation
  1. Antiarin is obtained in crystals, by first treating the inspissated milky juice with petroleum ether to remove fatty and other matters, and then dissolving the active principle out with absolute alcohol.

  2. The bile is remarkably thickened, and the theory is, that in such cases the jaundice is purely mechanical, the gall-duct being occluded by the inspissated bile.

  3. The water of the first boiling becomes red and thick, and when this is inspissated after the removal of the nuts it forms a catechu of high astringency and dark colour called in Bombay "Kossa.

  4. The nuts are again boiled, and the inspissated juice of the second decoction yields a weaker catechu of a brown or reddish colour.

  5. Lithologically they may be described as soft sandstone, the cementing material of which is a bitumen or inspissated petroleum derived from the underlying limestones.

  6. Jujube paste, the dried or inspissated jelly of the jujube; also, a confection made of gum arabic sweetened.

  7. The inspissated juice of a plant (Uncaria Gambir) growing in Malacca.

  8. Defn: The inspissated juice of ripe fruit, obtained by evaporation of the juice over a fire till it acquires the consistence of a sirup.

  9. Defn: An astringent inspissated juice obtained from the fruit of a plant (Cytinus hypocistis), growing from the roots of the Cistus, a small European shrub.

  10. The inspissated juice of licorice root, used as a confection and medicinal purposes.

  11. Defn: The inspissated juice of the Papaver somniferum, or white poppy.

  12. A soft confection made of the inspissated juice of fruit, licorice, or the like, with sugar, etc.

  13. Defn: The inspissated juice of the common lettuce, sometimes used as a substitute for opium.

  14. Defn: The inspissated juice of a tree of the genus Artocarpus (A.

  15. A saccharine fluid, consisting of the inspissated juices or decoctions of certain vegetables, as the sap of the birch, sycamore, and the like.

  16. An inspissated sap obtained from the rot of the Convolvulus Scammonia, of a blackish gray color, a nauseous smell like that of old cheese, and a somewhat acrid taste.

  17. The gall bladder contained two quarts of inspissated bile.

  18. Butler speaks of an individual with a single kidney who suffered suppression of urine for thirteen days, caused by occlusion of the ureter by an inspissated thrombus.

  19. Except when the auditory canal is completely blocked by inspissated pus, cerumen, or epithelial débris, it is sufficient to mop out the ear with small pledgets of cotton-wool.

  20. If the inspissated pus or epithelial débris cannot be removed by simple syringing, an ear-bath of warm hydrogen peroxide (10 vols.

  21. But I say--inspissated juice is good, isn't it?

  22. Some mordants which seem sufficiently inspissated with starch, liquefy in the course of a few days; and being apt to run in the printing-on make blotted work.

  23. The Indian manufacturers of sugar purchase the above inspissated juice or goor from the farmers, and generally prefer that of a granular honey consistence, which is offered for sale in pots.

  24. Sap green is the inspissated juice of buckthorn berries.

  25. This is the inspissated juice of an umbelliferous plant (the dorema armeniacum) which grows in Persia.

  26. Then filter anew, and after having inspissated the alcoholic solution by evaporation, pour into it a little water, evaporate gently again, and then leave it to itself in a cool place.

  27. The fruits must be crushed, squeezed in bags to expel the juices, which must then be inspissated either over the naked fire, or on a water or steam bath, in the air or in vacuo.

  28. They generally owe their elasticity to linseed oil, inspissated by long boiling, and rendered drying by litharge.

  29. The liquor is then boiled with the nuts, and affords an inspissated decoction.

  30. A large cylindrical cooler, about 6 feet wide and 2 feet deep, has been placed in certain sugar-works near the teache, for receiving successive charges of its inspissated syrup.

  31. The ashes of the inspissated juices of fresh vegetables, and especially the pulps of fruit, prepared in vessels of this metal, have exhibited the presence of copper on the application of chemical tests.

  32. The inspissated juice of the balsam apple.

  33. From the inspissated juice of the fresh leaves of the yew (Taxus baccata).

  34. A "rob," or inspissated juice of the berries, is likewise often employed.

  35. For pills of the herb take of its inspissated juice half-an-ounce, and of the finely powdered plant enough when mixed together to make from forty to sixty pills.

  36. Carrot sugar got from the inspissated juice of the roots may be used at table, and is good for the coughs of consumptive children.

  37. The inspissated juice of the common lettuce, sometimes used as a substitute for opium.

  38. The inspissated juice of ripe fruit, obtained by evaporation of the juice over a fire till it acquires the consistence of a sirup.

  39. Not, however, in the way usually adopted, of giving inspissated bile along with the food; a method of treatment which originated ere modern physiology rent the veil of therapeutical empiricism.

  40. Phanita is the inspissated juice of the sugarcane.

  41. One obtains the fruition of every wish, by making gifts, under the constellation Uttarashadha, of jugs full of barley-water, with ghee and inspissated juice of sugarcane in abundance.

  42. Humboldt informs us that the Curara is obtained from the bark of a tree called Vejuco de Mavacure; it is inspissated over a slow fire and then mixed with a gum drawn from the Kiracagnero.

  43. When one of its branches is broken, or its bark incised, a milky juice exudes, which becomes inspissated when in contact with the atmosphere.

  44. In this way, doubtless, some of those bodies have been inspissated or reduced to a fixed coal, while others, at a little distance, have retained most of their volatile parts.

  45. He mixed, for instance, an ounce of Luna cornea with an ounce and half of putrefied and inspissated urine, and from the mixture obtained a very beautiful Phosphorus.

  46. Put this inspissated juice into a jar, or other vessel of earth or glass; on its surface pour olive oil to the depth of a line, and set it in a cellar.

  47. In this case, small and encysted foci of inspissated pus scattered more or less throughout the growth indicate its true nature.

  48. Issuing from the opening is seen occasionally a little inspissated pus; more often, however, the dry, mealy-looking detritus to which we have before referred.

  49. To take one more case: few instincts are more remarkable than that which leads the swift of the Eastern Islands to make its nest wholly of inspissated saliva.


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