My friend began his restless pacing again, and suddenly pounced upon a little phial of tabloids which had been hidden behind some books on a shelf near the bed.
Someone visited your chambers last night," he said slowly, "and for your chloraltabloids substituted some containing hashish, or perhaps not pure hashish.
I crushed one of the tabloids in my palm and applied my tongue to the powder.
This is a little measure of brandy-and-water, in which some tabloids of morphia have been dissolved.
He would regularly swallow the tabloids of quinine or lithia, and fall back on the hard, coarse pillow, exhausted by the mere effort of unscrewing the nickel-cap of the little phial, and tell himself that he was getting stronger.
Are you takin' those dashed morphia tabloidsof Taggart's for bad-water collywobbles again?
He crossed the room once more in his stealthy fashion, and took from the mantelpiece a small bottle of nerve-tabloids which he had forgotten, and slipped them into his pocket, and then went out into the dark again.
Ross laughed and said, 'If I lived on weak tea and tabloids as you do, Purvis, I should be in my grave in ten days.
He felt the contact of the little bottle of cocaine tabloids Manners had forced upon him.
A moment later she had flung the tabloids into the red embers, and before John knew it she was holding his hand in hers, looking up into his face.
In effect he had been saying: "You will come and see me again immediately those cocaine tabloids have been consumed.
He bade good night to Manners, and as he shook hands with the big man, a little phial of white tabloids passed from Manners's palm to his own.
He saw the girl look at the tabloidswith an expression of loathing; then something seemed to pass through her that drew her rigid and erect.
He unscrewed the top of the little bottle, and poured the white tabloids one after another into the palm of her hand.
He was referring to the tabloids Manwitz had been in the habit of supplying to Treves.
He described his receipt of the cocaine tabloids from Conrad and his exhibition of the bogus five little wounds on his wrist, which had convinced Voules that he was a victim of the drug habit.
As plainly as though he saw the action, he mentally figured Chilcote's furtive glance, the furtive movement of his fingers to his waistcoat-pocket, the hasty dropping of the tabloids into the glass.
Instantly his back was turned, Chilcote drew a couple oftabloids from his pocket and dropped them into his glass.
Mixing some whiskey, he uncorked the tube, again he glanced apprehensively towards the door, then with a very nervous hand dropped two tabloids into the glass.
The tabloids dissolve, you know--" In his new excitement he held out his hand.
Then, as the picture completed itself, he lifted his hand with an abrupt movement and dropped the five tabloids one after another into the glass.
The effect of the morphia tabloids was still apparent in the greater steadiness of his hand and eye, the regained quiet of his susceptibilities, but the respite was temporary and lethargic.
Usually he carried his morphia tabloids with him, but to-day by a lapse of memory he had left them at home.
Automatically he took the tabloidsfrom the bottle, and carried them across the room to dissolve them in a glass of water.
With a sudden sweeping movement his hand flew outward, and the tabloidshurled through the air and buried themselves in the grass below.
A teaspoonful of the tincture in a cup of hot water, or one or two of the tabloids now so easily had, may be taken three times a day.
Or the tabloids of Guaiacum and sulphur, now found in our drug shops, may be taken, one tabloid representing the half-teaspoonful of tincture.
He now counted twenty tabloids into a tumbler, which he half filled with water.
His usual dose was three tabloids or fifteen grains.
It is then not surprising that the introduction into the intestinal tract of bacteria of the type Bulgaricus in the form of tabloids has not met with any decided success.
The powder and tabloidskeep well, but the liquid can only be relied on for about two months.
After cooling add from three to six previously crushed tabloids of culture, and stir well with a glass rod which has been sterilised in boiling water.
The present of a red silk handkerchief to one, and of a tin box that had held meat tabloids to the other, restored peace.
She had looked ill since the beginning of the term, and the bottle of aspirin tabloids had become quite an accustomed feature on the luncheon table; but when questioned she had always a smile and an easy excuse.
Into her glass of water she dropped three tabloids of aspirin.
I shouldn't have thought that you'd be asked for tabloids in a place like Reading.
I saw that it was a box which had contained tabloids of nitro-glycerine (a drug prescribed for diseases of the heart); and that it had been sold by a chemist of the name of Benjamin Wain, whose shop was in the High Street at Reading.
He was as thin as a skeleton, had red hair, and suffered from dyspepsia, remedies for which she carried about with her in her handbag, in the shape of tabloids and quack powders.
As regards drugs we think that you would derive most benefit from tabloids of bone marrow.
They must be taken with great caution at first; on the appearance of trembling, headaches or profuse perspiration, the use of the tabloids should be discontinued for three days.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "tabloids" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.