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Example sentences for "muriatic"

Lexicographically close words:
murexide; muri; muriate; muriated; muriates; murine; murio; muris; murk; murkier
  1. Chlorine gas, which is obtained from the chloride of sodium, was discovered by Scheele in 1777, who named it dephlogisticated muriatic acid.

  2. A small bit of gold is dissolved in a mixture of three parts muriatic acid and one of nitric acid, which forms the chloride of gold.

  3. Muriatic acid is successfully used for removing ink stains and iron mold on a number of colors which it does not attack.

  4. Pure muriatic acid one ounce, water one ounce, honey two ounces, mix thoroughly.

  5. Iron filings and vinegar will do almost as well, or rather iron filings moistened with diluted muriatic acid.

  6. Dip the straw in a solution of oxygenated muriatic acid, saturated with potash.

  7. If instead of flour, unbolted meal should be used, take three pounds of meal; half an ounce avoirdupois of muriatic acid; the same of carbonate of soda; and water enough to make it of a proper consistence.

  8. Take four pounds of flour, half an ounce avoirdupois of muriatic acid; the same of carbonate of soda; about a quart of water.

  9. Muriatic acid, either diluted or pure, as occasion may require, proves efficacious.

  10. It would be very easy in most situations, and very effectual, to fumigate them with muriatic gas.

  11. Or if we take some of the green acid of the copper, and make a liquid of it, and then pour this over common salt we are making what is known as muriatic acid.

  12. If we take the muriatic acid, which I have just referred to, and pour it over the manganese, we can make the most powerful agent of all, namely, chlorine.

  13. It has been suggested to use dilute sulphuric acid, or a mixture of this and common salt, in the place of muriatic acid in the above process.

  14. Having allowed it to rest, and drawn off the liquor and sediment (chiefly sand), the palm oil is ready for treatment with the bleaching reagent, which consists of potassium bichromate and commercial muriatic acid.

  15. Its acidity is probably due to muriatic or lactic acid--the acid of sour milk.

  16. Here in this little phial is muriatic acid.

  17. The partners retired with the gold, tested it with muriatic acid, weighed it, and after a short, excited interview one of them brought it back and asked with great nonchalance the price of the land.

  18. Muriatic acid with red oxide of lead will have a similar effect.

  19. Chimney pieces, or marble slabs, may be cleaned with muriatic acid, either diluted or in a pure state.

  20. Ink spots and iron moulds may be removed, by rubbing them with the salt of sorrel, or weak muriatic acid, and laying the part over a teapot or kettle of boiling water, so that it may be affected by the steam.

  21. It would also be proper frequently to fumigate them with vinegar or muriatic gas.

  22. To purify sick rooms from noxious vapours, exhalations, and all kinds of infected air, put half an ounce of finely pulverized black oxide of manganese into a saucer, and pour upon it nearly an ounce of muriatic acid.

  23. Or, mix a dram of oxymuriate of potash with two ounces of distilled water; and when the salt is dissolved, add two ounces of muriatic acid.

  24. The muriatic acid, diluted with five or six times its weight of water, may be applied to the spot; and after a minute or two, may be washed off, repeating the application as often as it is found necessary.

  25. Sulphuric, nitric, and muriatic acid cause great heat and a sensation of burning pain from the mouth down to the stomach.

  26. By washing in considerably diluted muriatic acid and water, all traces of this reagent are removed; they are then dried, and will keep for an indefinite period.

  27. But that neutral salt, formed of muriatic acid and ammonia, occurs very seldom in a native state, and almost exclusively among the productions of volcanoes.

  28. It is most frequently used in practice in this state of solution under the name of muriatic acid.

  29. Combined or impregnated with muriatic or hydrochloric acid.

  30. Of, pertaining to, or composed of, nitric acid and muriatic acid; nitrohydrochloric.

  31. Pertaining to, or consisting of, oxygen and muriatic acid, that is, hydrochloric acid.

  32. There can be little doubt that it was in consequence of these curious and important experiments of the French chemists that Davy's attention was again turned to muriatic acid gas.

  33. Afterwards chlorine gas was substituted for muriatic acid gas, and found still more efficacious.

  34. The conclusion to which they came was, that muriatic acid gas contained water as an essential constituent; and they succeeded by this hypothesis in accounting for all the different phenomena which they had observed.

  35. The muriatic acid solution is freed from silica, and afterwards from barytes, and all the earths and oxides which it contains, by means of carbonate of ammonia.

  36. Muriatic acid effervesced with it, when assisted by heat, and the elastic fluid that passed off had a yellowish colour, and the smell of aqua regia.

  37. Nothing now remains but the potash, or soda, in combination with muriatic acid.

  38. Thus, when muriatic acid gas was made to act upon hot litharge, a double decomposition took place, the chlorine united to the lead, while the hydrogen of the muriatic acid united with the oxygen of the litharge, and formed water.

  39. From his opinion respecting the nature of chlorine, that it was a compound of muriatic acid and oxygen, he naturally concluded that by this process he had formed a new prussic acid by adding oxygen to the old constituents.

  40. But Ampere conceived the idea that this acid, like muriatic acid, is a compound of hydrogen with an unknown supporter of combustion, to which the name fluorine was given.

  41. If we now examine the water, we find that it contains no chlorine, but merely a little muriatic acid.

  42. He has (we shall suppose) the mixture of iron and manganese to be separated from each other, in solution, in muriatic acid.

  43. The present practice is to employ chloride of lime, or chloride of soda, for the purpose of fumigating infected apartments, and the process is found still more effectual than the muriatic acid gas, as originally employed by Morveau.

  44. A feather dipped in muriatic or nitric acid, and applied to the parts after scraping and cleansing, is a good remedy.

  45. For these ulcers of the skin, the best remedies are, sulphur fumigations, nitro-muriatic acid baths, and ointment of tar and sulphur.

  46. Thus, in the present instance, the muriatic acid may be supposed to separate the lactic, while the latter precipitates the lithic, &c.

  47. It also dissolves readily in acids, and particularly in dilute muriatic acid; and if to the solution, oxalate of ammonia be added, the lime is precipitated alone, and the magnesium may be afterwards separated by the addition of pure ammonia.

  48. Muriatic acid, though praised by such high authorities, did not seem productive of any distinct useful effects.

  49. A deep rust on tools may be removed by soaking them in a strong, hot bath of potash and water for a half hour, then dipping them into a solution of 1 part muriatic acid in 2 parts cold water.

  50. If you want to make hydrogen, you can make it easily from bits of zinc, and sulphuric or muriatic acid.

  51. The muriatic acid being the stronger of the two, takes the place of the carbonic acid, which escapes as a gas, the residue forming muriate of lime or chloride of calcium.

  52. The ore which I shewed you just now was taken, and digested in nitro-muriatic acid of a certain strength, and partly converted into a solution, with the leaving behind of certain bodies that I have upon the table.

  53. Here is a jar containing a little muriatic acid, and here is a taper which, if I put it into that jar, will shew only the presence of common air.

  54. It is in catarrh of the bile-ducts that nitric and nitro-muriatic acids have proved useful, rather than in cirrhosis and other diseases of the liver-tissues.

  55. This important fact should be borne in mind, that such a mistake as presenting pepsin with chalk mixture, or the extractum pancreatis with dilute muriatic acid, may be avoided.

  56. A nitro-muriatic bath, both local and general, was formerly more used than now.

  57. Habershon advises infusions of the bitter tonics with hydrocyanic and nitro-muriatic acid.

  58. Salt should be added to it, and I am in the habit of adding to it also about seven drops of dilute muriatic acid to facilitate its digestion.

  59. A quarter of a pound of beef or more, tender and lean, cut up finely, is mixed with a cup or a tumbler of water and from five to seven drops of dilute muriatic acid.

  60. Nitric and nitro-muriatic acids have long been celebrated for their good effects in jaundice.

  61. Write with cobalt dissolved in diluted muriatic acid; the letters will be invisible when cold, but when warmed they will appear a bluish green.

  62. Muriatic acid and ammonia are examples, also ammonia and carbonic acid.

  63. For it is quite difficult to perfectly combine the acid and alkali, and then the bread is streaked with muriatic fire; then one might easily take into the system a thousand streaks a year, and then one would become a fire-eater.

  64. Chemists will say, if bread must be improvised, use soda and muriatic acid.

  65. The true analysis of muriatic acid, into chlorine and hydrogen, caused the second property, composition from a base and oxygen, to be excluded from the connotation.


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