On evaporation it may be pure enough to admit of identification, but if not, it may be redissolved and purified on the usual principles.
These masses are completely redissolved when the tentacles re-expand.
In some cases it is a reversible phenomenon, thus gelatine coagulated by cold is redissolved by heat; whereas with other colloids the process is irreversible, albumin coagulated by heat is not redissolved on cooling.
The compound is redissolved in weak alkaline solutions and employed in this form for engine-sizing papers.
The sulphite isredissolved as bisulphite by treatment with sulphurous acid.
It is, therefore, redissolved and again thrown down by ammonia.
This is possible even under the most favorable conditions, and for this reason the iron precipitate is redissolved and again precipitated to free it from calcium.
When redissolved and crystallized, it produces quartz.
Clay, the earth of sea-water, is hardened into talc, when redissolved is regenerated in the form of asbestus, and when more intimately dissolved resumes the form of mica.
The brownish-coloured crystals thus obtained are allowed to effloresce by exposure to dry air, and are then redissolved and recrystallised.
To render them still purer they may be redissolved and crystallised a second and a third time, if necessary.
On the addition of sulphuric acid, bitartrate of potassium is thrown down; on adding either nitrate of silver or chloride of barium nothing is thrown down, or only what is redissolved by the addition of water.
There appears either immediately or after some minutes a black precipitate of iodosulphate of quinine, which if redissolved in boiling proof spirit, forms in cooling the beautiful crystals of herapathite.
In order to purify the crude rosaniline hydrochloride it is washed with a small quantity of water, redissolved in boiling water slightly acidulated with hydrochloric acid, filtered, and allowed to crystallise.
Potassa throws down a white precipitate, which is redissolved by adding the same in excess.
When this point is arrived at, the fused nitrate is allowed to cool, when it is redissolved in water, filtered or decanted from the insoluble black oxide of copper, and evaporated in the usual way.
The solid matter, after being precipitated and dried, is redissolved in six times its volume of water, and then filtered.
The deposit retained upon the filter after washing with sulphate of magnesium is redissolved in distilled water, and dialysed for three days.
This precipitate was separated by filtration, washed in water, and redissolved in absolute alcohol or chloroform.
On cooling it separates from the fluid in the form of crystals, which are placed on a filter and can then beredissolved in a small quantity of water.
The albuminous coagula, if washed, redissolved in water, and injected into the most sensitive animals, produce no harmful effect whatever.
The clear liquid, after being filtered, is again precipitated by absolute alcohol, and the precipitate, redissolved in an equal quantity of water, is just as toxic as the original filtered liquid.
The jelly which forms, upon cooling the filtered solution, is dark coloured, but, being dried and redissolved in hot water, it becomes clear and colourless.
The above crystals are carefully detached with chisels, redissolved in boiling water, adding for each 100 kilos.
After cooling, a quantity of crystals of chlorate of potash is obtained, which are to be redissolved and crystallized again to purify them.
The liquid may be evaporated to dryness, redissolved in distilled water, slightly acidulated with hydrochloric acid, and tested with bichloride of platinum.
The liquid is next evaporated to dryness at a steam-heat, the residuum redissolved in a little hot water, and the solution filtered.
The resulting precipitate is at firstredissolved on agitation, a soluble double iodide being formed; subsequently the iodide of gold is precipitated, leaving the supernatant liquor free of colour.
The powder is redissolved in boiling alcohol and crystallised by very slow or by spontaneous evaporation.
They are thoroughly drained, redissolved in as little water as possible, and after being allowed to stand for a few hours to deposit impurities, again evaporated and crystallised.
The precipitate containing the gallium concentrated in a small bulk, is redissolved in acid, and the excess of the latter reagent removed by evaporation, after which it is boiled with much water.
We found in each case that the specific rotatory power of the alcohol precipitate redissolved in water was not the same as that of the original gum.
The precipitate was then redissolved in water, bleached as before and diluted to a 5 per cent.
Sulphate of copper gives a faint bluish precipitate with oxalic acid (oxalate of copper), which is not redissolved by a few drops of hydrochloric acid.
These tests will not act if the solution contain nitric acid in excess, in which case the liquid must be evaporated to crystallization, and the crystals washed and redissolved in water.
The antimony is separated as sulphide, redissolved in hydrochloric acid, and oxidised with a crystal of chlorate of potash.
The precipitate is redissolved in a little hydrochloric acid, and again precipitated by sodium acetate.
The solution must be free from a precipitate; if the soda be incautiously added a permanent precipitate will be formed, in which case it must be redissolved with hydrochloric acid, and soda again, but more cautiously, added.
Then add sodium hydroxide solution until the precipitate which first forms is redissolved and a clear blue liquid obtained.
The stored-up fat is redissolvedas needed, and enters the blood, where it again becomes available to the active cells.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "redissolved" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.