Syringing overhead on bright days is necessary, and a little reduction in the temperature is desirable when the leaves are of full size.
When they come into bloom they should be removed to the greenhouse or conservatory; while in bloom syringing should be suspended.
They are also greatly benefited by syringing overhead.
Syringing with soot-water twice a week until the flower-buds appear will darken the leaves and deepen the colour of the flowers.
Another good remedy is to scatter sulphur over the leaves while the dew is upon them, afterwards giving them a syringing of clear water.
As soon as the fruit is set the syringing should recommence.
These troublesome pests which appear in the heat of summer, may be got rid of by constantly syringing the plants attacked, and by occasionally washing the walls, etc.
A good syringing once a week with the garden hose will keep the trees vigorous and free from insects.
Aphides or black-fly may be destroyed by tobacco dust and syringing well with an infusion of soft soap.
In syringing the plants use nothing but the purest rainwater, but the less the leaves are wetted the better for the appearance of the plants.
In the winter months it should be watered carefully, but in the summer it is improved bysyringing with warm water.
The greenhouse should be kept rather close, at a temperature of 55 degrees to 60 degrees, while the plants are growing; but abundant syringing is necessary at all times.
Syringing in this month may be suspended in time of heavy dews, but in dry nights resort to it again.
The health and beauty of the foliage of the plants may be much improved by syringing them freely three evenings in the week, except in moist weather, when it ought not to be done.
Where there is mildew, after syringing the plant, dust it on the affected parts with flowers of sulphur, and set them for a few days where they will be sheltered from the wind, after which wash off the sulphur.
Keeping the house constantly clean, the plants clear of decayed leaves and every thing of a corroding nature, and duly syringing them, is the surest method of not being much troubled with insects.
The most effectual remedy is a thorough syringing with water, and profusely under the foliage.
If it is detected in time, syringing is an effectual remedy.
Dew falling through the night will in part supply the syringing operation, but it must not be suspended altogether.
No local after-treatment is required, and spraying or syringing may prove harmful.
Treatment consists in keeping the ear clean by syringing and careful drying.
Syringing should be avoided unless suppuration has already occurred, in which case treatment for this condition must be adopted.
The treatment of chronic middle-ear suppuration consists in keeping the parts clean by syringing with antiseptic lotions.
When arising in connection with acute otitis, the application of several leeches behind the ear, free incision of the membrane, and syringing with hot boracic lotion may be sufficient.
After syringingthe ear it should be dried thoroughly with pieces of sterile absorbent cotton.
It consists in syringing the plants affected with a solution of two ounces of blue vitriol dissolved in a largo stable bucket of water.
Frequent syringing with clear water will keep off the red spider that often destroys the foliage, and attention to picking the seed pods will lengthen the season of bloom.
For the red spider, the chief means of control is syringing with either clear or soapy water.
These are chiefly accumulations of wax within the ear, and should be removed first by softening with a little warm almond oil and then syringing with weak spirit and tepid water.
A moist atmosphere to be kept up by sprinkling the floor and paths, and by syringing the Vines lightly every morning and evening until the leaves begin to appear, when the supply of moisture will not be so much required.
Abundance of syringing and good waterings with liquid manure may now be given them.
Give air freely, shut up early, and syringe the plants overhead till the flowers expand, when syringing should be discontinued.
The houses now commencing to force to be kept moderately moist, and in a sweet healthy state, syringing the trees pretty freely once or twice a-day with tepid water.
Encourage free growth, as soon as possible after they have done blooming, by placing them in heat, supplying an abundance of water, and syringing freely.
As soon as they are out of bloom, take them into heat to make their growth, syringing them frequently and supplying them occasionally with manure water, and shade for a short time in the middle of the day when the sun is powerful.
When the ripest of the fruit is gathered, give the trees a good syringing overhead, to cleanse and refresh the leaves, and to keep down insects.
Ply the syringe every fine evening to refresh the plants, and to keep down insects, until the flowers expand, when syringing should be discontinued.
Where the fruit is still swelling and ripening, slight fires will be useful in dull, cold weather, to assist in ripening the fruit; and but little syringing and watering will be required from this time forward.
Keep all the growing stock warm and moist, syringingthem lightly twice a-day.
Keep thinning the berries and stopping the laterals as they advance, which, with syringing and giving air, is the principal work to be done.
Follow this prescription by a good syringing of cold water the following morning.
It may be kept from laying eggs on the tree bysyringing occasionally with soap-suds.
They require syringingas well as rich feeding when carrying a crop.
Where the foliage is young follow the spraying by syringing half-an-hour afterwards" (Castle).
Syringing in the open air is good for all trees in dry weather after the fruit has set.
The most effectual is smoking with sulphur, dusting with dry flowers of sulphur, or syringing with sulphur water.
Syringing should be practiced every morning and evening; but when the flower-buds are ready to open, this must be confined to the stems of the plants and the pots; otherwise the flowers will be injured by the moisture.
The method of syringing has already been described (see p.
In such cases, after syringing out any existing blood-clots, some cocaine and adrenalin solution should be instilled into the meatus.
The bone, however, should be freely removed until the normal dura mater is reached, and the cavity afterwards rendered as aseptic as possible by syringing it out with hydrogen peroxide lotion.
This spontaneous nystagmus is greatly modified by the caloric tests, being strongly exaggerated on syringing with hot water, and weakened or arrested on syringing with cold water.
As the secretion becomes less the syringing should be diminished.
Subsequent syringing of the nose should be done from the opposite side.
Syringing with hot water causes a nystagmus directed towards the ear syringed; syringing with cold water, away from the ear.
When the surgeon considers he has successfully removed the obstruction, he should verify this fact by syringingout and drying the ear, and again obtaining a clear view of the tympanic membrane.
A weaker solution may be used for syringing the plants.
When syringe comes, remove dressing, and clean wound by forcibly syringingcarbolic solution directly into wound.
Failing in this, syringing with warm water, as for removal of wax, while the patient is sitting, may prove successful.
You have only to add one drop after another of the acid to your full teacupful of warm water, till the feeling produced by the syringing is all that could be desired.
Very great good can often be done by a little careful syringing of internal wounds.
Syringing with lukewarm water will at once relieve this, and then weaker acid may be used.
Thorough syringing of the cavity from which the matter comes out (see Wounds, Syringing) is the best means of cure, aided by thorough heating of the swelling and surrounding parts with moist heat for an hour or more twice a day.
Syringing the bowels with this cool acid mixture in the more serious catarrh of these will also cure.
If an ear is discharging from some internal sore, nothing is more important than syringing with acetic acid, but it must be done with very peculiar care.
This syringing should be repeated until the wound is thoroughly clean in every part.
A third syringing may be employed, when about half-a-teacupful is taken and retained.
There is still one syringing which we may notice--that of suppurating ears.
A tablespoonful of tobacco sheep-dip, or extract of tobacco, to a couple of gallons of water, also makes an effective syringing or dipping solution.
In Syringing plants, it is well to take care that the ground does not become too wet; otherwise the plant may suffer at its root.
Red spider is a natural enemy of the Heliotrope, and when once it obtains a foothold is a very difficult pest to manage, but frequent syringing with water will keep it in check.
Syringing the plants frequently will destroy the pests.
After dipping or syringing the plants they may be allowed to stand over night, when they should be rinsed off with clear water.
Syringing to check transpiration from the foliage is very useful with plants which are recently transplanted.
The aphis, or green plant louse, appears under all conditions, and must be kept down by syringing with tobacco-tea or fumigation with tobacco stems.
It consists in syringing the vagina immediately after connection with a solution of sulphate of zinc, of alum, pearl-ash, or any salt that acts chemically on the semen, and at the same time produces no unfavorable effect on the female.
During the growing period the atmosphere must be kept moist by damping the walls and pathways, and by syringing the plants according to their needs; when growth is completed less moisture will be necessary.
Destroy aphides and other insects by syringing with tobacco water, or by fumigating, or by dusting with tobacco powder.
Syringing is also beneficial in washing away dirt and insects.
This is also necessary in the case of water used for syringing the plants, which should be done two or three times a day in all stoves and forcing-houses, especially during the period when the young growth is being developed.
I believe that the object of this syringing process is to free the eggs from parasitic animalcules, and possibly to prevent the growth of conferva, which, I have found, rapidly overspreads those removed from her attention.
If the syringing is properly done you will recover your hearing immediately.
Before syringing out your ears read the article "All about the ear" which appeared in this magazine October 1897.
But if the weather is dry, yet mild, it is well to give them a good syringing when they are all in place, especially if they have come a long journey.
Therefore syringing with water or any clear liquid is absolutely useless; for if a few Green Fly are knocked off one shoot they will only settle on some other.
Keep all old leaves picked off and the soil stirred about the plants, with syringing and fumigating as suggested on page 134.
In the mornings, and on bright days, syringing the foliage will be beneficial, but never in dull weather, as the leaves should never be wet over night.
If only a few plants are kept, a rubber bulb plant sprinkler may do for syringing them.
Keep the leaves and stems clean by wiping off every once in a while with a soft cloth and soapy warm water, syringing with clean water afterwards.
In putting the plants into the bench (or pots) select a cloudy day, and then keep them shaded for a few days, with frequent syringing of the foliage, until they become established.
Moisture should be freely distributed about the house by syringing beneath the staging and between the pots in summer, but in winter the houses, if kept at the prescribed low temperature, will be moist without much water being distributed.
Excessive or too forcible syringing may bring about that complication most to be feared, although it may appear through no fault in care, i.
The syringing is permissible only once daily, unless the discharge is copious, but the canal may be wiped out in this manner several times a day with dry cotton.
The water should always be removed from the ear after syringing by twisting a small wisp of absorbent cotton about the end of a small stick, as a toothpick, which has been dipped into water to make the cotton adhere.
Syringing the leaves with water impregnated with tar has also saved plants from attack.
We need only say that by fumigation, sulphur, or by syringing with a suitable insecticide, the plants must be kept clean, or they cannot be healthy.
Syringing promotes a moist atmosphere, and is unfavourable to the Red Spider, which thrives best in heat and dryness.
Perhaps the best possible position is a moist shady part of a vinery, if care be taken when syringing the vines to prevent the spray from falling upon the seed-pans.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "syringing" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.