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Example sentences for "nitrous oxide"

  • In 1818 Faraday showed that the inhalation of the vapour of ether produced anaesthetic effects similar to those of nitrous oxide; and this property of ether was also shown by the American physicians, John D.

  • Having learned through Wells of the latter's successful use of nitrous oxide gas, but not knowing how to make it, he sought the advice of Dr.

  • Nitrous oxide gas, as already mentioned, was known to and used by Wells, in Hartford.

  • That his experiments were confined to nitrous oxide, but did not show it to be an efficient and reliable anesthetic agent.

  • A perfectly safe and pleasant substitute for chloroform, ether, nitrous oxide gas, and all other anæsthetics.

  • It should be administered the same as Nitrous Oxide, but it does not produce headache and nausea as that sometimes does.

  • Nitrous oxide, much the safest of the three, has not been the favorite, but has held its ground, especially with dentists.

  • The methods of liquefying gases (by pressure and cold) will be described under ammonia, nitrous oxide, sulphurous anhydride, and in later footnotes.

  • Nitrous oxide gas is chiefly used for the extraction of teeth.

  • I am not sure that it was correct, for the effects of nitrous oxide is, perhaps, due to a deprivation of mechanically mixed air.

  • A Mexican went into the office of a dentist in one of the Mexican cities to have a tooth extracted by nitrous oxide gas.

  • They shine with greatly increased brilliancy in oxygen gas and in nitrous oxide.

  • I took it because I knew that a gas--and it has proved to be nitrous oxide--is absorbed through the lungs into the circulation and its presence can be told for a considerable period after administration.

  • Only it was a laughing gas jag--nitrous oxide.

  • I mean simply that a test of your blood shows that you were poisoned by nitrous oxide gas.

  • This gas is known to chemists by the name of the nitrous oxide, or the gaseous oxide of azote, or the protoxide of nitrogen.

  • In this state of bodily and mental debility, he inspired about three quarts of nitrous oxide.

  • If no other operative procedure be required at the same time, the anæsthesia of nitrous oxide gas or chloride of ethyl will be long enough.

  • Nitrous oxide gas or chloride of ethyl are generally recommended for this short operation, but in cases that present any difficulty it is better to follow the nitrous oxide with ether, or the chloride of ethyl with chloroform.

  • According to its author this operation can be carried out under local anæsthesia, but it is generally advisable to employ some such general anæsthetic as nitrous oxide or chloride of ethyl.

  • Undoubtedly he was the first to discover the practicability of nitrous oxide anaesthesia, and to proclaim the discovery with a discoverer's zeal.

  • The thread of the history of nitrous oxide may be broken here.

  • At the first return of recollection, however, undaunted by the past, the young enthusiastic philosopher called out for the green bag, when he breathed twelve quarts of nitrous oxide, for three or four minutes.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "nitrous oxide" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    battle against; considerable force; dear girls; eyes rested; general tendency; held himself; human affairs; immortal life; indicate the; knowing good and evil; more thorough; motor boat; nitrous acid; nitrous ether; nitrous oxide; put you; reading desk; stand away; state policy; temperance society; this quarter; three families; well corked; whether you