In my judgment, the symptoms detailed in Mr. Cook’s case are referable neither to apoplexy, epilepsy, nor to any disease that I have ever witnessed.
If it be the fact that there is no known disease which can account for such symptoms as those in Cook’s case, and that they are referable to poison alone, can you have any doubt that that poison was strychnia?
The symptoms, as they have been described, certainly cannot be referable to apoplexy or epilepsy.
I will show you that his was a death referablein its symptoms to the tetanus produced by strychnine, and not to any other possible form of tetanus.
Mr. Serjeant SHEE: Just so, my lord, or in other words, tetanus not referable to any known cause.
All these effects should be referable to the same group of causes.
According to Zittel flatfishes of species referable to genera living at present, Rhombus (Bothus) and Solea, are found in the Eocene deposits.
In the living sharks of the family of Heterodontidae, this form of fin occurs and the teeth of the same general type constitute the earliest remains distinctly referable to sharks in the Devonian rocks.
There is some reason to regard that Palaeospondylus is referable to the Cyclostomes.
No specimens of turkeys presently found in Kansas are available for examination but these birds probably are referable to M.
Following upon these, come examples possessing other characters and therefore not referable to the same type.
This is the best example of an interment referable to the early Palaeolithic age (Fig.
From other parts of the world, actual human remains referable to earlier geological epochs are scanty save in South America.
Mr. Blanford, who named the above species, which was procured in the expedition to Yarkand, is doubtful whether it may not be referable to the last species.
This, which Blyth considered a good species, is, I am informed, referablewith M.
Out of a large series of specimens referable to S.
Colouring most diverse, no less than ten named species being referable to this one, viz.
The remaining specimen in its features is distinctly referable to S.
Much interest attaches to the state of the genito-urinary organs in relapsing fever, but caution is required to distinguish lesions that have existed prior to the attack from those properly referable to it.
The subsequent symptoms referable to this system do not differ materially from those present in the beginning, except the absence of vomiting.
Apparent exceptions to this rule are probably referable to cases of mild parametritis, in which the initial {1005} fever and the pain were insufficient to attract attention to the existence of local inflammation.
In other cases abdominal symptoms are prominent, while those referable to the head and chest are less urgent.
To these symptoms, referable to the heart and to the digestive tract, are added nervous troubles; there are noises in the ears, and disturbances of vision.
The toxic action is referable to the central nervous system, and not to that of peripheral motor nerve-endings or motor nerve-fibres.
The post-mortem appearances showed nothingreferable to digitalis save a few spots of inflammation on the stomach.
The symptoms are very various, and are referable to disturbance of the digestive organs, and to the effect on the nervous system.
The symptoms are mainly referable to the nervous system, causing a transverse myelitis and paraplegia.
This is, perhaps, the most extreme case of destruction on record; the cause of the unusually violent action is referable to the acid acting on an empty stomach.
They are referable indeed to the three classes of warlike instruments, industrial implements, and personal ornaments, but the varieties of each sort are comparatively numerous.
Such at least is the current opinion; although the proofs that such difference is notreferable to difference of age or sex, is by no means irrefragable.
What is the class of rocks most obviously referable to volcanic agency?
This suspicion, and more especially the light color of an older specimen from nearby White Salmon, Washington, and the light color of two older specimens from Parkdale, Oregon, which seem to us to be referable to T.
Biological Surveys Collection, from Grapevine Ranch clearly are not referable to T.
Utah from the eastern to the western border but in doing this did not mention the rock squirrel of the Kaibab Plateau of Arizona that also might be expected to be referable to S.
From a geographic standpoint, it seemed unlikely that the specimen from La Huerta would be referable to T.
Examination of the two specimens from Gainesville convinces us that Bailey was correct and the specimens therefore arereferable to Sciurus niger rufiventer.
In dark color of the superciliary stripe the specimens in question are referable to T.
Comparison of the material reveals that the animals arereferable instead to the later named subspecies, Geomys lutescens jugossicularis Hooper (Occas.
The true chrysolite of the modern mineralogist is a magnesium silicate, referable to the species olivine.
The cloudiness is referable to the presence of multitudes of microscopic cavities.
Love, therefore, is solely referable to virtue; it is by the corruption of passion that it ceases to be love.
Hence we are entitled to apply the term substance to a phenomenon, only because we suppose its existence in all time, a notion which the word permanence does not fully express, as it seems rather to be referable to future time.
And this is the case with phenomena, as regards that in them which is referable to mere sensation.
We do not assign an age to these pieces, but it appears probable that they were preceded by a ruder pottery also referable to the ancient Celts.
The ceramic remains found on the Phoenician coast are nearly all referable to her later conquerors.
Egyptian section, and referableto a very remote antiquity, covered with what is apparently tin enamel, bearing purple decorations.
The grandest of the temporary lakes referable to blocking by the continental glaciers of the ice age must be looked for in the largest valleys that lay within the territory invaded and which normally drain toward the retiring ice front.
All surface features referable to continental glaciers, whether carved in rock or molded from loose materials, present gently flowing outlines which are convex upward (Fig.
Drift is now a generic term and refers to all deposits directly or indirectly referable to the continental glaciers.
It is to be added that studies made in the environs of Pozzuoli have fully confirmed the changes of level revealed by the columns, through the discovery of now elevated shore lines which are referable to the period of deep submergence.
Zapus luteus australis, based on a single individual taken in a riparian thicket along the Rio Grande at Socorro, New Mexico, isreferable to Z.
All these specimens, however, are bestreferable to Z.
Zapus hudsonius from Maine, New Hampshire, west-central and northern New England are different from neighboring subspecies and are referable to Z.
The majority of characters studied show these animals to be referable to Z.
Again, Meissner's corpuscles and Herbst's corpuscles are evidentlyreferable to the same class as those of Grandry and Pacini.
Such surfaces are remarkably insensitive in the healthy condition, and the pain in such cavities is essentially a pressure phenomenon and referable to special sense-organs, such as Pacinian bodies, etc.
It is added that the remains of cats from Roman villas at Silchester and Dursley are probably referable to the domesticated breed.
If the phenomena are not here entirely referable to Natural Selection and the direct action of the environment--if there remains an inexplicable residue, this cannot be referred to Sexual Selection, but to some as yet unknown power.
When before the coroner I expressed my opinion that the death was referable to antimony and arsenic.
All the indications in Mrs. James’s case were referable to natural causes.
Is the effect referable to the color in the glass, or to some kind of optic action, which the most transparent glass might produce?
I do not know; but I suppose it to be referable to the very slight tint in the glass.
The faculty of the retriever, however, may justly be regarded as more inexplicable and less easily referable to the instinctive passions of the species.
Some specimens, also, from Greenland, are referable to ferns, analogous to those of our European coal-mines.
A division of tertiary strata intervening between the Eocene and Pliocene formations; so called, because a minority of its fossil shells are referable to living species.
Chronologically considered, however, the Calabrian formations are comparatively of modern date, often abounding in fossil shells referable to species now living in the Mediterranean.
Arduino, we have seen, had pointed out numerous varieties of trap-rock in the Vicentin as analogous to volcanic products, and as distinctly referable to ancient submarine eruptions.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "referable" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word. Other words: better; eligible; favored; favoring; right; select; superior