The best form of linseed meal is that which is obtained from seed from which the oil has not been extracted.
Common work only requires frequent rubbing with linseed oil and woollen rags.
Give linseed tea, milk, almond or olive oil, and excite vomiting.
The surfaces of these cheeses are kept clean and free from insects by rubbing with linseed oil.
They are rubbed with linseed oil to prevent the surface cracking, and finally are shellacked.
A dressing of linseedoil either with or without bone black is applied.
The cheeses are kept in special ripening rooms, and rubbed frequently withlinseed oil to keep the surfaces free from molds and vermin.
Should the hot dish have scorched the wood, darken the place with a little linseed oil, and then polish it.
Mix together one pint oflinseed oil, half a pint of vinegar, and two table-spoonfuls of turpentine.
If any reader desires to try the experiment I would suggest that the leaves be steamed rather than boiled, and pure olive oil used in the place of linseed oil.
Soft wax--a mixture of bees' wax and resin softened by linseed oil to the proper consistency, easily found by trial, also used for temporarily closing tubes.
On the whole, I think boiled linseed oil and white or red lead--white or red paint in fact--is less deleterious than other things I have tried.
Linseed and cotton-seed cake may probably be substituted for it in this country.
Boiled linseed and short-cut wheat straw mixed with the grains, were found to prevent the cows from turning sick.
From analysis it is shown to be equal or superior to linseed meal.
Three pounds of this cotton-seed cake are equivalent to four of linseed cake of average quality.
Cotton-seed cake is much richer in oils and albuminous matters than the linseed cake.
Lixivium that is made with quick lyme and wine: adde unto the whole a little salt; then make thereof what you list; then boyle them in linseed oyle.
Take red Lead ground first very fine, temper it with linseed oyle: write with it, and lay leafe gold on it, let it dry, and pollish it.
A couple of coats of white enamel applied to the outside will produce a very pretty effect, and the inside may be finished with linseed oil, which makes a beautiful finish for the cigar-boxes.
It may be supposed that Gutenberg acquired the knowledge of the newly found properties of boiled linseed oil[402] from German painters.
Linseed oil, as the most bulky ingredient, very properly occupies the first place.
There was risk of fire in the boiling of linseed oil; there was discomfort and dirt connected with the manipulation of the ingredients; and in inexpert hands there was waste and often entire failure.
For oil-gilding the moulding is prepared with two coats of fine thin size to fill the pores of the wood, and afterwards it receives a coat of oil gold-size, which consists of a mixture of boiled linseed oil and ochre.
A little spirit of turpentine, or linseed oil, mixed with lime water, if kept constantly to the part will remove the pain.
To render boots and shoes impervious to the wet, take a pint of linseed oil, half a pound of mutton suet, six or eight ounces of bees' wax, and a small piece of rosin.
Impressions may also be transferred by mixing a little vermillion with linseed oil so as to make it fluid; then with a pen dipped in it, trace every line of the print accurately.
Boil together two pounds of turpentine, one pound of litharge in powder, and two or three pints of linseed oil.
In general, all that is needful in the treatment of this complaint is to keep the body open by means of tamarinds, manna, or other gentle laxatives; and to supply the patient frequently with barley water, or linseed tea sweetened with honey.
The general remedy in this case is milk, well mulled with eggs; or eggs and flour mixed with oil, melted butter, linseed or anniseed.
Hay tea mixed with linseed and boiled to a jelly, has likewise been tried with success.
The composition may be improved by the addition of an equal quantity of coal tar with the linseed oil; and two coats of it laid on any kind of weather boards, will be found superior to any kind of paint used for that purpose.
Put into a pint of cold-drawn linseed oil, four pennyworth of alkanet root, and two pennyworth of rose pink.
A composition called linseed milk, made of linseed oil-cake powdered, and gradually mixed with skim-milk sweetened with treacle, has been tried with considerable effect.
Sift the whole through a fine sieve, and work it up with linseed oil to the consistence of common paint, taking care to grind it fine, and mix it well together.
Should a house painted with a mixture of linseed oil, lead oxid, and barium sulphate go to buildings or coating compositions?
The Manufacture of Solid and Liquid Driers from Linseed Oil and Rosin; Linolic Acid Compounds of the Driers.
Production of the Drying Oils by Expression and Extraction: Refining and Bleaching; Oil Cakes and Meal: The Refining and Bleaching of the Drying Oils; The Bleaching of Linseed Oil.
Ironrust and its Formation--Protection from Rusting by Paint--Grounding the Iron with Linseed Oil, etc.
The two exceptions were, first, a mixture of linseed oil two parts to japan drier one part; second, a preparation said to contain ninety per cent.
Stir well together and, as wanted, mix to consistency of stiff putty with pure boiled linseed oil.
Mix, when wanted, to consistency of stiff putty, with raw linseed oil.
The raw linseed oil absorbs the oxygen from the air very slowly, but the addition of turpentine is a great aid in overcoming this defect.
The best paints are usually made by mixing together white lead, linseed oil, pigment of the desired color (colors ground in oil), and a drier.
Where tinting colors are used in sufficiently large quantities to alter the consistency of the paint, add one-half as much linseed oil and turpentine, by weight, as you add tinting material.
Oil varnishes made from good hard gums, pure linseed oil, and turpentine, are the most valuable.
After the priming coat of paint is thoroly dry, putty up all knot holes, dents, cracks, and other defects in the surface with a pure linseed oil putty composed of equal parts of white lead and whiting.
Put a small quantity in an open vessel, and add sufficient linseed oil to rather more than cover it; it will be fit for use in a few days, when the oil may be poured off and more added.
Red lead was also used sometimes, and in the furniture room at South Kensington there are several chests and other pieces of furniture which have the incised design filled in with a mixture of whiting, glue, and linseed oil.
Amasai stayed up all night to give her linseed oil and whisky.
But we have an awful suspicion that the poor sick cow got nothing but linseed oil.
Linseed oil is also frequently used to relieve the constipation, but with this there is a fear of billiousness following its use.
It is that of feeding pigs of the kind mentioned on vegetable food, and a mixture of palm nut, cocoa nut, ground nut, or linseed cake.
Bread poultices are less generally useful than those of linseed meal.
They do not retain the heat nearly so well as those oflinseed meal, and are chiefly used in cuts, wounds, or small abscesses; and also because they are so easily made.
A mixture of one part of mustard to two of linseedmeal is, however, often of much use in the chest affections of children.
For polishing mahogany or walnut furniture, (that has never been varnished) linseed oil has been recommended.
Take one pint of linseed oil, one ounce of Burgundy pitch, two of beeswax, and two of spirits of turpentine; melt them carefully over a slow fire.
Take of fine sand one part, two of clay, three of ashes; mix with linseed oil to the consistency required.
These are usually boiled and then mixed into a salad with linseed or sesamum oil and flavoured with salt or powdered chillies, these last being the Kunbi's indispensable condiment.
On days when they are shaved they plaster the head with soft black earth, and then wash it off and rub their bodies with a littlelinseed or sesamum oil, or, if they can afford it, with cocoanut oil.
The boiled pulse of arhar (Cajanus indicus) is commonly eaten with juari, and the chapatis are either dipped into cold linseed oil or consumed dry.
During the journey songs are sung, of which the following is a specimen: The linseed and gram are in flower in Chait.
The linseed oil and lime-water known as "Carron Oil" forms the best dressing to apply.
A teaspoonful of boiled liquorice and linseed two or three times a day has a good effect.
Stone surfaces were primed with white lead mixed with linseed oil, applied in successive coats, and carefully smoothed when dry.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "linseed" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word. Other words: berry; fruit; grain; hayseed; kernel; nut; pit; seed; stone