Livingstone often referred to were composed of resin of jalap, calomel, rhubarb, and quinine.
Livingstone administered a dose of calomel with resin of jalap, followed by quinine.
If the drop is not absorbed by the stone, it may be due to a layer of dust or to previous saturation with solutions of resin or varnish.
Similarly objects which have been preserved by the application of solutions of resin or varnish should be protected from the direct access of sunlight, for the sudden warming may easily cause cracks.
If the water-tap is suddenly turned off when the air is exhausted the pressure of the outer air will force the water into the bell and cause it to mix with the solution of resin or varnish.
Olshausen often noticed on freshly excavated antiquities of various kinds a peculiar smell of resin or gum, especially after treatment with hydrochloric acid ("Verhandl.
Adherent pitch or resinis best removed by a mixture of alcohol and ether.
The horses used for bareback riding are called "resin backs," because you spread resin on their backs in order to hold the rider's feet firmly.
He was always a superb animal, a real leader of the "resin back" herd.
Amber is the resin which exuded from certain coniferous trees that, in Tertiary times, grew abundantly in northern Europe.
Kauri is the resin of Dammara australis, a living coniferous tree of New Zealand, and the "gum" is dug from the earth on the sites of forests which have now disappeared.
Blanchard, may not prove unacceptable: dissolve elasticresin cut small in five times its weight of rectified essential oil of turpentine, by keeping them some days together.
BAR SOAP Take of lime water 1 teacupful, spirits of turpentine 2 teaspoonsful, resin 1/2 lb.
The same figure is also found in Landa’s character for the Maya day Cib, a word signifying copal, a gum or resinformerly used in religious ceremonies as incense.
They are generally very closely woven and are then coated over with a resin or gum which renders them capable of holding water.
In our Southern States pine-fat with resin is called lightwood, and is used for the same purpose.
It means the fragrant resin which exudes from both the trunk and the cones of the beautiful cedar.
It fixes its nest in place by means of the resin of the tree and coats it with the same material, so as to render it impervious to the rain.
The seams are coated with resin of the balm of Gilead.
The air is distinctly fragrant with balsam and resin and mint,--every breath of it a gift we may well thank God for.
The pine and fir cones are growing well, resin and balsam dripping from every tree, and seeds are ripening fast, promising a fine harvest.
The further treatment consists in the use of diluted boracic or resin ointment.
Balsam of Peru or resin ointment spread on gauze should be applied to broken chilblains.
Colouring will be the chief consideration after the resin has been selected, and on this the judgment of the operator will have to be centred.
The same process has to be gone through in the drying of a spiritous or alcoholic varnish, but it is so much the more rapid in consequence of there being only the alcohol to disperse, leaving the resin in a comparatively dry state.
It has never been proved clinically or experimentally that this drug has any action whatever except that its irritant resin might, if taken in sufficient quantity, cause irritation of the stomach and vomiting.
The knife was to be used in delicate surgical work upon the deceased at a pig-killing, and the resin was for splicing fishing-rods.
He rained upon them night and day with a thick resin and the earth was all dark.
The whole shore line, as far as he could see, was lighted up by bonfires where the people burned resin and perfume to commemorate his going.
Incense and frankincense, fragrance of roses and resin of pines, cedar smells smoking in the sunlight, scent the air.
Other dust is in this air, the gold dust of sunlight and resin and ozone.
The resin of the pitch-pine is principally condensed at the base of the bole and in the spreading roots.
A rough smack of resin was in the air, and a crystal mountain purity.
Impregnated white paper with a resinated ferrous salt, a resin compound of plumbic ferrocyanide, and a resin compound of ferrocyanide of manganese in combination with a salt of molybdenum and a resin compound of zinc sulphide.
Papers containing starch and resin are more powerfully acted upon by this vapor than papers of a less complex composition.
Shellac may be bleached by dissolving it in a boiling lye of caustic potash and passing chlorine through the solution till all the resin is precipitated, the product being known as white shellac.
To obtain the largest amount of both resin and dye-stuff it is necessary to gather the twigs with their living inhabitants in or near June and November.
The term is derived from the resin lac, which substance is the basis of lacquers properly so called.
Some men whom he valeted might have been doped with opium, certainly, but all did not exhibit those indications which, from hearsay, he associated with the resin of the white poppy.
Curse it indeed; but the police persist in believing, or in pretending to believe, that any establishment patronized by lovers of the magic resin must necessarily be a resort of criminals.
If theresin is laid on a table and briskly rubbed with cat's fur it becomes negatively electrified.
The rest of it, however, is insulated from the resin by the air.
It consists, as shown in figure 8, of a metal plate B having an insulating handle of glass H, and a flat cake of resin or ebonite R.
Amber, the fossil resin of a pine tree, was found in Sicily, the shores of the Baltic, and other parts of Europe.
In the main, therefore, the negative charge of the resin is free to induce an opposite or positive charge on the lower surface and a negative charge on the upper surface of the plate.
Independent of a possible content of volatile oil, every naturally occurring resin consists of several resins which, however, can, as a rule, be separated only with difficulty.
The resins are widely diffused in the vegetable kingdom, there being scarcely a plant which does not contain resin in one form or another.
It contains very little volatile oil, and a resinwhich melts at 212° F.
But frequently a transparent stain remains with old oils without their being adulterated, which is due to the resin formed by the absorption of oxygen and remaining dissolved in the oil.
China was for a considerable time adulterated withresin and petroleum, they having found as much as 30 per cent.
Treat the residue with strong alcohol; if it dissolves it may be resin or castor oil.
The usual process of manufacturing stick-pomade is as follows: Melt the fat, wax and resin in the water-bath, then strain the mixture and cool it off by constant stirring until a thin film is formed upon the surface.
Sandarac is the resin exuding from the bark of Thuja articulata, Desf.
Gamboge is a gum-resin from the East Indian tree Garcimia Cambogia.
Indigo was undoubtedly in use, and it is highly probable that the red resin known as dragon’s blood was also in use.
Boil up the resin and oil together (be careful of fire).
The proportions of this luting are determined by putting more or less resin and red ochre, or turpentine and wax, as the "lithocolle" is to be more or less brittle or elastic.
For common taxidermic work, paste containing resin (sold at leather merchants') is strong and cheap.
The solution is evaporated to dryness, and the residue treated with water, whereby the fat and resin are separated.
Benzoic acid, as it exists in the resin, is the natural production of the plant from which the resin is derived.
The spirit is to be removed by distillation, and the remaining watery solution, from which the resin has been separated by filtration, treated with dilute sulphuric acid, to precipitate the benzoic acid.
It is so far valuable, that the total acid contents of the resin can be determined by it.
What remains in the resin may be separated by boiling it with caustic lime, and precipitating the acid from the resulting benzoate of lime with hydrochloric acid.
Stoltze has recommended a method by which all the acid can be removed from the benzoin:--The resin is to be dissolved in spirit, to which is to be added a watery solution of carbonate of soda, decomposed previously by alcohol.
Shoemakers' resin is sometimes also used for the same purpose; but it is less effectual than oil of turpentine.
It has all, or nearly all, the odor of the resin from which it is derived.
It is the resin formed by the absorption of oxygen, and remaining dissolved in the essence, which destroys its original flavor.
If the soap intended to be produced is to be colorless, noresin must be employed, and a larger dose of liquor ammoniæ and caustic alkali must be used, according to the dryness of the stearine matters to be operated upon.
It is said, that by digging in the barest spots, lumps of the kind of resin which flows from the kauri pine are frequently found.
The timber of the kauri is the most valuable production of the island; moreover, a quantity of resin oozes from the bark, which is sold at a penny a pound to the Americans, but its use was then unknown.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "resin" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word. Other words: gum; plastic; resin