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Example sentences for "macerated"

Lexicographically close words:
macaws; maccaroni; macchi; mace; macerate; macerating; maceration; maces; mach; machan
  1. Mrs. Hussey recommends that it should be sliced and macerated in salt, the deep-red liquor which exudes should be put hot into a dish with a little lemon-juice and minced shallots, and a broiled steak deposited in it.

  2. It is commonly known as the "Fly-agaric," its substance macerated in milk having been employed for centuries as an effectual fly-poison.

  3. Others say, they should first be macerated in water, to extract their malignity; cattle many times perishing without this preparation.

  4. A portion of the flesh should be macerated in spirit as directed above.

  5. In examination of the dried smaller Fungi as the Sphæriæ, the capsules should be macerated for a time in water.

  6. Coarsely powdered anacardium nuts (the fruit of the Anacardium orientale) are macerated in a well-closed bottle with petroleum ether, for some time.

  7. All the solids are well bruised, and macerated in the mixed fluids for 14 days, when the whole is pressed, and strained through a flannel bag.

  8. Their cooks prepared pickles with the greatest care, and the various ingredients were macerated in oil, brine, and vinegar, with which they were often impregnated drop by drop.

  9. They live mostly on the ground, scraping the earth with their feet, and feeding on seeds and grains, which, previous to digestion, are macerated in their crops.

  10. The chamber-cleaner actually macerated and soaked himself through and through with the colored water, and almost drowned out his Gallic malady--he guzzled so in his malicious pleasure.

  11. Pliny states that wine in which Saffron was macerated gave a fragrant odour to theatres about which it was sprinkled.

  12. If the scraped root be macerated in vinegar, it will form a mixture (which may be sweetened with glycerine to the taste) very effective against whooping cough.

  13. Vinegar has proved useful in neutralising the poisonous effects of Hemlock, and it is said if the plant is macerated or boiled in vinegar it becomes altogether inert.

  14. If the plant be macerated in alcohol for a week, then cotton wool dipped in the liquid is as efficacious for staying bleeding, when applied to the spot, as the strongly astringent muriate of iron.

  15. Externally, the bruised leaves are of excellent service for cleansing and stimulating foul sores and ulcers, being first macerated in a Cabbage leaf with warmth.

  16. These when unbruised and macerated in boiling water yield only a tasteless mucilage which resides in their skin.

  17. It is with the same view that should be macerated either in water elevated to a certain degree of temperature, or in acid liquors, the hard tissues, in the interior of which it is proposed to denude certain parts.

  18. After the injection has been completed, the hand must be macerated in water, frequently changed, until the blood and cuticle are removed, when it may be dried and varnished, or suspended in spirits of turpentine.

  19. In order that the subject may retain all its beauty and whiteness, it must be macerated for several days in alum before embalming it.

  20. In order to obtain macerated bones perfectly white, several processes are employed: 1.

  21. Amole root is macerated and beaten up and down in a bowl of water until a good lather and suds are produced.

  22. She literally saw me being poisoned by food and drink mixed with menstrual fluid that had been reinforced with macerated sacramental wafers and drugs skilfully dosed.

  23. When you think that that delicious Reine Margot kept her body macerated with perfumes but as grimy as the inside of a stovepipe!

  24. The integuments of the limbs are shrivelled and damp, and look as if they had been macerated in water; and if a fold of the skin is pinched up it subsides very slowly indeed.

  25. At times it is merely macerated by the pus continually covering it, and in that condition yields to even moderate pressure.

  26. Pasty accumulations of muco-pus and diphtheritic exudation, like macerated chamois leather, cover the tongue, which is often so enormously swollen as to bulge between the teeth and project from the mouth.

  27. The heart in wet beriberi is habitually large and flabby, its muscular tissue softened and of a pale-yellow and macerated appearance.

  28. A stiff thick kind of paper board, formed of several single sheets pasted one upon another, or of paper macerated and pressed into molds, etc.

  29. Note: In the West Indies, the decayed leaves and stems of canes are called field trash; the bruised or macerated rind of canes is called cane trash; and both are called trash.

  30. Martius was none of those ascetic, withered, pale professors of mystic learning of those days, who bleared their eyes over the midnight furnace, and macerated their bodies by outmatching the polar bear.

  31. The method of disinfection adopted for the king's tent was to fumigate it with a mixture of amber, chick peas, or lupine, which were macerated in wine, and then placed on live charcoal.

  32. Well, then, they macerated the intestines of fish in water, saturated with salt, until putrefaction began to show itself; they then added parsley and vinegar.

  33. IX-157] Sometimes also they macerated the seeds in milk and honey.

  34. It is that part of the digestive apparatus which is analogous to the single stomach of other Mammalia, as the food there undergoes the process of chymification, after being macerated and ground down in the three first stomachs.

  35. If an apple be stuck all over with spice, such as cloves, then exposed to the air for a few days, and afterwards macerated in purified melted lard, or any other fatty matter, the grease will become perfumed.

  36. The kino and the rhatany root are to be macerated in the alcohol for seven or eight days; and after filtration, the other articles are to be added.

  37. After being subjected to the fire, macerated and reduced to a certain stage of fermentation, the "Tee" is stirred up with water, and is then ready for distillation.

  38. When the flowers are completely exhausted, the fat is strained from them into fresh pots, in which it is again macerated with fresh flowers as before.

  39. Hence they are macerated with water and allowed to stand in a warm place for 24 hours.

  40. Of the well-cleaned fresh hog stomach the mucous membrane is dissected off, chopped finely and macerated in water acidulated with muriatic acid for several days, during which time the mass is frequently well stirred.

  41. In the neighbourhood of Mecca the rose leaves are macerated in salt-and-water for 2 or 3 days, and then distilled, the water being received in separate receivers at different parts of the process.

  42. This substance is macerated in cold distilled water for some hours, pressed, and treated a second time in the same manner.

  43. The Dublin College directs the vegetable substances to be macerated in the still with about 5 times their weight of water, for 24 hours, when one half of the water is to be drawn over.

  44. From the bruised fresh herb, macerated for 2 or 3 days in salt and water, and then distilled.

  45. From the bark of Cinnamomum zeylanicum, macerated for several days in salt and water, and then distilled.

  46. The scalp and flesh of the face were macerated to a soft pulpy substance; which, on being touched, separated entirely from the bones.

  47. The baya feeds naturally on grasshoppers and other insects, but will subsist, when tame, on pulse macerated in water: his flesh is warm and drying, and easy of digestion.

  48. The bark is stripped in early summer, and the inner portion is macerated or "rotted" in water for four or five weeks.

  49. The coverings should be macerated from the very pulpy species.


  50. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "macerated" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.
    Other words:
    awash; doughy; drenched; drowned; engulfed; flabby; fleshy; flooded; immersed; inundated; mushy; pasty; permeated; pithy; pulpy; saturated; soaked; soaking; sodden; soft; soggy; sopping; soused; spongy; squashy; submerged; succulent; swamped; waterlogged; weeping