Those who do not possess this hydric sulphide water can saturate in an hour the liquid to be tested, by passing the gas in under pressure.
To avoid this, the quantity of alkali required to saponify the myricine is first ascertained, and then that required to saturate the free cerotic acid.
And if you consider the enormous quantity of organic matter from the feet of people coming in, which must saturate it, this is by no means surprising.
The patient has had re-introduced into the body the emanations from himself which day after day and week after week saturate his unaired bedding.
Besides this, the animal exhalations from your inmates saturate your furniture.
How long does it take tosaturate the market on each planet?
Saturate boiling water with commercial saltpetre, filter while hot in a beaker glass, which is to be placed in cold water, and stir while the solution is cooling.
What weight of ammonium chloride is necessary to furnish enough ammonia to saturate 1 l.
The weight of the solid which will completely saturate a definite volume of a liquid at a given temperature is called the solubility of the substance at that temperature.
What weight of calcium carbonate would be necessary to prepare sufficient carbon dioxide to saturate 10 l.
With some other ions, such as iron, the sulphide formed does not saturate the solution, and no precipitate results.
All of the solid in excess of the quantity required to saturate the solution at this temperature will at once crystallize out, leaving the solution saturated.
Fill and saturateeach kind With good according to its mind.
Defn: A substance used to neutralize or saturate the affinity of another substance.
The sand beneath our feet is saturate With blood of martyrs.
To convert into ether, or into subtile fluid; to saturate with ether.
Defn: To satisfy the affinity of; to cause to become inert by chemical combination with all that it can hold; as, to saturate phosphorus with chlorine.
We found it best to saturate our wads by melting, or rather heating, our hardest fat nearly to boiling point, throwing them in and letting them absorb as much as possible, and then spreading them out on a clean surface to cool.
When a South Sea whaler is trying out blubber, the men take biscuits, saturate them thoroughly with water, tie them in a cloth to which a line is made fast, and throw them into the boiling oil.
Erdman before the Minnesota association suggests that the amount of fluid that fills the arteries is not enough to percolate through the capillaries and into the tissues, and saturate all the parts of the body.
If skin slip occurs after the body is embalmed it is best to place a layer of cotton over the part where the skin slip occurs andsaturate the cotton with equal parts of alcohol, formaldehyde and glycerine.
Bandage any large sores and saturate the bandage with normal fluid.
To steep in moisture; to wet thoroughly; to soak; to saturate with water or other liquid; to immerse.
Put sufficient pearl-ash into hot water, to make it very strong of it; then saturate the paint which is daubed on the glass with it.
Mix tartaric with water, to give it a pleasant acid taste, then saturate the black spots with it, taking care not to have it touch the clean part of the garment.
Put just cold water enough to the sugar to saturate it.
Saturate the spot with spirits of turpentine, and let it remain several hours, then rub it between the hands.
It is recommended by Gaultier de Claubry, in cases where the detection of arsenic is desired, to saturate and afterwards boil the suspected fluid with sulphuric acid, in order to remove the nitric and hydrochloric acids present.
It has been proposed, instead of using nitrate of lime, to dissolve the organic matter in potassa and then saturate the fluid with nitric acid.
The filtered liquor is to be evaporated, and mixed with the small quantity of acid necessary to saturate the alkali left free by the precipitation of the above bi-salts.
This having been washed with cold water upon a cloth, is to be boiled in water containing as much muriatic acid as will saturate the lime.
The most ordinary process for converting the ammoniacal liquor of the gas works into sal ammoniac, is to saturate it with sulphuric acid, and to decompose the sulphate, thus formed, by the processes above described.
One thousand parts of good balsam, should, by its benzoic acid, saturate 75 parts of crystallised carbonate of soda.
Receive the gases in a solution of potash; saturate this fluid mixture of the chloride of potassium, and the chlorate and bromate of potash with nitric acid, adding afterwards nitrate of silver.
Salts, containing strong acids, saturate a very large quantity of colouring matter, in proportion to their place in the scale of chemical equivalents.
And again we have Thompson's own In thee, Queen, man is saturate in God.
As the temperature goes lower, less and less moisture is required tosaturate the air.
The constant exhalation of moisture from the lungs is sufficient to saturate the air in a short time.
Firstly, those rains must be extremely heavy if they tended to swell the rivers; the ground being parched, and requiring great moisture to saturate it.
A vender of violets shuffled up beside them; Langham picked up a dewy bundle of blossoms, and their perfume seemed to saturate the air till it tasted on the tongue.
Mr. Kirwan had already considered the force of affinity as directly proportional to the quantity of base necessary to saturate a given weight of acid.
The liquid thus containing benzoate of lime in solution is filtered, and muriatic acid added in sufficient quantity to saturate the lime.
But if we add to a solution of sulphate of soda as much potash as will saturate all the sulphuric acid, no such decomposition will take place; at least, we have no evidence that it does.
Suppose we have dissolved in another portion of water, a quantity of barytes, just sufficient to saturate the sulphuric acid in the sulphate of soda.
A 4-foot drainage will be constantly tending to have four feet of soil ready for the reception of rain, and it will take much more rain to saturate four feet than two.
But if we want to see the club culminating to its highest pitch of power, we must go across the water and saturate ourselves with the horrors of the Jacobin clubs, the Breton, and the Feuillans.
It will be necessary to apply water daily and in sufficient quantity to saturateall the soil in the pot or basket.
Pour this off and apply enough of it to each plant to saturate all the soil in the pot.
Always apply enough water each time to saturate all the soil in the box, and make it a rule to do this every morning or evening.
If the soil were very heavy, capillary rise might be too energetic and saturate the soil for some distance above the water-level.
Clean it out with peroxide of hydrogen, after which saturate absorbent cotton with tincture iodine, pack in tight and sew the skin to hold it in place.
Water is best administered in the afternoon of a genial day, and should be sufficient to saturate the bed.
Saturate down to the roots, and then leave the plants alone until more water is wanted.
In dry weather thoroughly saturate the trench with water before sowing, and keep the seedlings as cool as possible by screening them from the sun.