In the sympiesometer a gas is used, which presses on the confined surface of the liquid with an uniform pressure at an equal state of temperature.
The Sympiesometer is an instrument used chiefly at sea for purposes of comparison with the mercurial and aneroid barometers.
The sympiesometer should be carried and handled so as to keep the top always upwards, to prevent the air mechanically mixing with the liquid.
The Sympiesometer is now rarely used, the Aneroid Barometer being found equally sensitive and less liable to derangement.
The sympiesometer is very sensitive, and feels the alterations in the atmospheric pressure sooner than the ordinary marine barometer.
I think that represents fairly enough the mental attitude of the average British soldier who came out to France into an unknown land in which he was to do "his bit.
The younger men knew nothing of the psychological effect of shell-fire, and their imagination was not haunted by any fear.
Not yet had they heard the roar of Germany's massed artillery or seen the heavens open and rain down death.
And mind your P's and Q's with them French hussies.
They spoke a queer lingo, the French, but were all right.
A very {412} heavy squall, with lightning and thunder, passed over the ship this afternoon, depressing the sympiesometer more than I had ever witnessed.
The sympiesometer was my constant companion: I preferred it to a barometer, as being much more portable and quicker in its motions.
The sympiesometer had been more on the alert, and had fallen more rapidly.
Still very fine weather, although the barometer and sympiesometer were lower than I had yet seen them in this country.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "sympiesometer" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.