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Example sentences for "soluble"

Lexicographically close words:
solstices; solstitial; solt; solubilities; solubility; solum; solummodo; solus; solute; solution
  1. It is necessary to purchase colors soluble in oil.

  2. Shellac is soluble in both grain alcohol (ethyl alcohol) and wood alcohol (methyl alcohol), but grain alcohol is preferable.

  3. They may be made of any coloring matter that is soluble in water, and are particularly good for hard woods and for use in large quantities.

  4. Copenhagen, 1898) has devised a test whereby it can be determined whether this treatment has been carried out or not; milk contains a soluble enzyme known as peroxidase which has the property of decomposing hydrogen peroxid.

  5. The curdling power can be restored by the addition of soluble lime salts or of acids.

  6. If the pigment is produced in considerable quantities, and is soluble in any of the constituents of the cheese, the color will not appear in spots but will be more diffuse, or may impart a color to the entire mass.

  7. A very considerable part of the cheese thus becomes soluble in water, and it is much more easily digested than in an unripened condition.

  8. In these changes there is not only a breaking down of the casein into soluble compounds, which process makes the cheese soft and plastic under pressure, but the characteristic flavor is developed in greater or less degree.

  9. In order to confer antitoxic immunity recourse must be had to vaccination by soluble poisons and toxins.

  10. For it is they which absorb and digest toxins as well as soluble poisons.

  11. The phagocytes also manufacture several digestive ferments; their principal digestive juice is a soluble ferment of the trypsin category, to which Metchnikoff gave the name of cytase.

  12. He had chosen the trisulphide, a very slightly soluble salt of an orange colour, in order to find it again easily within the organism.

  13. In both cases," says Metchnikoff, "a diastasic action is due to soluble ferments produced by living elements.

  14. Roux and Salimbeni, he had found that it is by soluble poisons that the cholera vibrions harm the organism or kill it, but that small doses of the same poisons are vaccines and make the blood of the vaccinated animal antitoxic.

  15. But, in artificial immunity, other soluble ferments come into play, developed in consequence of vaccination.

  16. Evidently the cream of tartar had caused the decomposition of some of the insoluble calomel and had produced a soluble mercurial compound.

  17. In all these cases of partial decomposition some of the mercurous chloride--the calomel--is changed into soluble mercuric chloride and metallic mercury.

  18. Entirely ignoring the action of the cream of tartar in bringing this substance partly into the condition of a soluble irritant poison!

  19. All soluble compounds of mercury are active poisons in small doses, while, as was fully proven by Doctor Cooke's extraordinary practice with this substance, pure unchanged calomel is one of the most insoluble substances.

  20. The air itself causes rocks to crumble; percolating water robs them of their soluble salts, reducing even solid granite to a loose mass of quartz grains and clay.

  21. Some of this mineral was absorbed, for lime is readily soluble in water.

  22. In union with chlorine, each forms a soluble salt, and is thus found in water.

  23. Apparently they are insoluble in water and soluble in oil.

  24. Besides this gaseous substance there are produced a number of compounds which are soluble in water and which are poured out from the cells into the tissue spaces surrounding them and which pass thence into the blood stream.

  25. Carbon dioxide is many times as soluble as oxygen, so that a great deal more of it can be handled by merely dissolving.

  26. The means of transport is in the sap; since starch is not soluble in water, it must be changed back into sugar.

  27. It is found in hard striated crystalline masses, and is not altered by exposure to the air, but is readily soluble in water.

  28. Nicholson, found that by the action of strong sulphuric acid the aniline blue could be rendered soluble in water or alkali, and the value of the colouring-matter was enormously increased by this discovery.

  29. Soluble nitrates are, in most cases, more efficient fertilizers than the salts of ammonia, and the ammonia which is supplied to the soil is converted into nitrates therein before the plant can assimilate the nitrogen.

  30. The colouring-matter as formed by this method is basic and insoluble in water; it is made acid and soluble by treatment with sulphuric acid, which converts it into a sulpho-acid.

  31. Jacobsen in 1882 under the name of quinoline yellow, a colouring-matter which forms a soluble sulpho-acid by the action of sulphuric acid.

  32. Aniline blue discovered; leading in 1862 to soluble and Nicholson blues.

  33. It can be made soluble by the action of sulphuric acid in just the same way as the other aniline blue.

  34. The anthracene by washing with these solvents is freed from more soluble impurities, and may then contain from 30 to 80 per cent.

  35. In making gun cotton, the time of immersion in the acids must be the same for twenty grains as for any large quantity: when good, there is a peculiar crispness in the cotton, and it is quite soluble in the ether.

  36. Lime, whether freshly burnt, or slacked, acts powerfully on moist fibrous vegetable matters, and forms with them a compost, of which a part is usually soluble in water.

  37. After turnips, barley with grass seeds is sown; and the land having been little exhausted by the turnip crop, affords the soluble parts of the decomposing manure to the grain.

  38. Soils abounding in soluble vegetable manures are injured by quicklime, as it tends to decompose their soluble matters, or to form with them compounds less soluble than the pure vegetable substance.

  39. The electrolyte may consist of saturated solutions of soluble alkaline metals and earths.

  40. These are various, but among the most common are the soluble sulphates, and sometimes free sulphuric acid evolved by the oxidisation of metallic sulphides.

  41. Another group of metals, zinc, lead, magnesium, and antimony, have white rusts which are not soluble in water.

  42. The action of the lye is to form with the grease a soap soluble in water.

  43. Silica is soluble in solutions of alkaline carbonates, as shown in New Zealand geysers; the solvent action being increased by heat and pressure, so also would be the silicate or sulphide of gold.

  44. All of these are soluble and in the presence of certain reagents, also existing naturally, can be deposited in metallic form.

  45. It is very slightly soluble in boiling water, but is soluble in dilute alcohol and in alkaline solutions, which it soon turns of a yellow or reddish colour.

  46. The hurds from these processes may contain traces of the chemicals or oils and also soluble gums in greater degree than those of the dew-retted or water-retted hemp.

  47. The hurds thus produced contain a small percentage of soluble gums, chiefly of the pectose series.

  48. The alkalies potash, soda, lime, and magnesia, are in nearly all of their combinations in the soil sufficiently soluble for the purposes of growth.

  49. Organic manures must be protected against the escape of their ammonia and the leaching out of their soluble parts.

  50. Potash, soda, lime, and magnesia, are soluble in their pure forms.

  51. These exist in the soil in combination with the alkalies, as sulphates and phosphates, which are more or less soluble under natural circumstances.

  52. The phosphate is very slowly soluble in water, and consequently furnishes food to plants slowly.

  53. The soluble portions of the manure are equally diffused through every part of the heap.

  54. D] In some soils the fluorides undoubtedly supply plants with soluble silicates, as fluoric acid has the power of dissolving silica.

  55. It in part prevents the leaching out of the soluble parts of the ash.

  56. In the same way water in passing through manures takes up the soluble portions of the ash as fast as liberated by decomposition, and carries them into the soil below; or, if the water runs off from the surface, they accompany it.

  57. Analysis of the ash of the ROOT [Berthier]-- Soluble Matter 12.

  58. Its ash, too, which becomes available, contains soluble inorganic matter, and in this way it acts as a direct manure.

  59. This soluble matter from below, often forms a very hard crust, which is a complete shield to prevent the admission of air with its ameliorating effects, and should, as far as possible, be avoided.

  60. This liquid should not be changed, as it contains much soluble manure.

  61. We have already described the most simple way in which crystals may be formed, and we may easily make objects for our microscope in this manner of all the substances we can find which are soluble in water.

  62. In addition to all of the above and many more not mentioned there are four metals commonly found in impure water, either in small solid particles, or in the form of one of their compounds soluble in water.

  63. Cullen, that the oil separated from soap by an acid was much more inflammable than before, resembling essential oil, and soluble in V.

  64. The precipitate was pure sulphuret of arsenic, soluble in ammonia when slightly heated, and composed of equal parts of sulphur and the metal.

  65. It is founded upon the circumstances that many alloys, when heated with sulphuret of potash, become changed into a mixture of sulphurets, and that sulphuret of arsenic is very soluble in sulphuret of potash.

  66. A pound of the lichen cut small is to be macerated in solution of carbonate of potassa, until all that is soluble is separated; the above quantity will neutralize two gros[133] of the carbonate.

  67. The seleniate, like the sulphate of soda, is most soluble in water at 181°.

  68. Lime-water, a precipitate soluble with effervescence in acetic acid.

  69. Besides being soluble in alcohol it is entirely soluble in oil and also in hot water, though a large quantity of the latter fluid is required for the purpose.

  70. On boiling, a slight pellicle appeared, soluble in nitric acid.

  71. The effect of cooking on the water-soluble vitamine in carrots and navy beans.

  72. The nutrition value of margarines and butter substitutes with reference to their content of the fat soluble accessory growth substance.

  73. The answer lay in the discovery of a third vitamine, water-soluble like "B" but otherwise of entirely different behavior and properties.

  74. The fat-soluble A vitamine in Xerophthalmia.

  75. This view is based on the fact that when sources which yield the water-soluble "B" in rat feeding are tested for antineuritic power these sources are apparently parallel in antineuritic power and growth production.

  76. The fat-soluble vitamine content of roots, together with some observations on their water-soluble content.

  77. Voegtlin and Meyers have recently shown that it is soluble in olive oil and in oleic acid and their data suggest a new means of concentrating the substance which may be of value in tracing its character.

  78. Note on the fat-soluble growth promoting substance in lard and cotton seed oil.

  79. This is siphoned off and provides the butter fat named in the diets, (b) An aqueous opalescent layer consisting of water and some of the water-soluble constituents of the milk.

  80. The greater number of the earthy substances are little, or not at all, soluble in water.

  81. It is a white crystalline solid, easily soluble in water, the solution showing a strongly acid reaction with litmus; the colour, however, is ultimately discharged by the bleaching power of the compound.

  82. The iodates of the alkali metals are, however, readily soluble in water (except potassium iodate).

  83. It is readily soluble in water, but excess of water decomposes it.

  84. They are mostly insoluble or only very slightly soluble in water.

  85. It is soluble in a solution of caustic potash, a dilute solution most probably containing the hypoiodite, which, however, changes slowly into iodate, the change taking place rapidly on warming.

  86. It is readily soluble in water, one volume of water at 10 deg.

  87. The soluble iodides, on the addition of silver nitrate to their nitric acid solution, give a yellow precipitate of silver iodide, which is insoluble in ammonia solution.

  88. It is only very sparingly soluble in water, but dissolves readily in solutions of the alkaline iodides and in alcohol, ether, carbon bisulphide, chloroform, and many liquid hydrocarbons.


  89. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "soluble" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.