The platinochloride, as before observed, isprecipitable by ether from alcoholic solution; it contains 28.
Its salts would be precipitable by barium carbonate; the gallium salts are thrown down by this reagent.
It differs from ordinary gelatin in being precipitable by acetic acid, alum, and acetate of lead.
The entire amount of proteid matter present was precipitated by the ammonium salt, thus showing that the peptone originally added had been completely transformed into something precipitable by saturation of the fluid with ammonium sulphate.
As a class, the proteoses are characterized by far readier solubility in water than native proteids, by a far greater degree of diffusibility, by non-coagulability by heat and by alcohol, although precipitable by the latter agent.
The albumose precipitable by sodium chloride, although different from an albumid, evidently comes from the anti-group and is a cleavage product which in turn may undergo further hydration and splitting by continued treatment.
This colouring principle, however, appears to be precipitable by all the acids, when it is accompanied by the animal matter of the cochineal.
It contains a substance of a diastasic nature, precipitable by alcohol, and destructible by heating for an hour at 58° C.
The coagulant substance in these venoms is precipitable by alcohol at the same time as the neurotoxin and other active substances.
Other metals precipitable by sulphuretted hydrogen must be absent as well as strong oxidising agents.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "precipitable" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.