The History of a mouthful of bread, and its effect on the organization of men and animalsHarper, 1866 - 399 páginas |
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Página 8
Jean Macé. XXIV . - THE WORK OF THE ORGANS XXV . - CARBONIC ACID • · XXVI . ALIMENTS OF COMBUSTION XXVII . ALIMENTS OF NUTRITION ( continued ) — NITROGEN OR AZOTE · • XXVIII . - COMPOSITION OF THE BLOOD 200 209 216 225 234 Second art ...
Jean Macé. XXIV . - THE WORK OF THE ORGANS XXV . - CARBONIC ACID • · XXVI . ALIMENTS OF COMBUSTION XXVII . ALIMENTS OF NUTRITION ( continued ) — NITROGEN OR AZOTE · • XXVIII . - COMPOSITION OF THE BLOOD 200 209 216 225 234 Second art ...
Página 44
... acid - water ; and watch air - bubbles passing through bent glass tubes , some of which are as dangerous as cannon balls . They scrape old bones , and slice scraps no bigger than a pin's head . They keep their eyes fixed for hours upon ...
... acid - water ; and watch air - bubbles passing through bent glass tubes , some of which are as dangerous as cannon balls . They scrape old bones , and slice scraps no bigger than a pin's head . They keep their eyes fixed for hours upon ...
Página 52
... acids eat into the enamel , as vinegar or lemon - juice does into marble ; and one of the best means of preserving this protecting armor of the teeth is never to eat the unripe windfalls of fruit , which I have seen unreasonable ...
... acids eat into the enamel , as vinegar or lemon - juice does into marble ; and one of the best means of preserving this protecting armor of the teeth is never to eat the unripe windfalls of fruit , which I have seen unreasonable ...
Página 209
... acid itself , for it cannot be seen any more than the air which fills an empty glass . But I can tell you where ... acid which sent the cork flying in that wild way ; the carbonic acid which * This is the name learned men have given to ...
... acid itself , for it cannot be seen any more than the air which fills an empty glass . But I can tell you where ... acid which sent the cork flying in that wild way ; the carbonic acid which * This is the name learned men have given to ...
Página 210
... acid , in its quality of acidity , for thence it has its name ; the word acid being borrowed from a Latin word signifying the sharp pungent taste , almost fine - pointed as it were , peculiar to all substances which we call acids . It ...
... acid , in its quality of acidity , for thence it has its name ; the word acid being borrowed from a Latin word signifying the sharp pungent taste , almost fine - pointed as it were , peculiar to all substances which we call acids . It ...
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The History of a Mouthful of Bread; And Its Effect On the Organization of ... Jean Macé Vista previa limitada - 2023 |
Términos y frases comunes
albumen aliments animal aorta arteries begin bile birds body bones bread breathe called canal canines carbonic acid Carnivora carried cetaceans charcoal chyle chyliferous vessels chyme Cloth cockchafer combustible comes cook crustaceans dear child diaphragm digestive tube duodenum everything explain fact feet fibrine fire fishes gills give globules goes Half Calf hand head heart hydrogen incisors insects intestine labor learned LETTER little girl liver lives look lungs machine mammals matter means molars mollusk mouth muscles nature never nourishment oesophagus once organs ounces ourselves oxygen pachydermata pass poor porter pouch pylorus remember reptiles ruminants side sometimes soon sort speak stomach substance swallow talking teeth tell thing tion told tongue tree turn veins venous blood vertebral column whole wonderful wood word worm Zoophytes
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Página 237 - Well, It is no more red than the water of a stream would be if you were to fill it with little red fishes. Suppose the fishes to be very, very small, as small as a grain of sand, and closely crowded together through the whole depth of the stream, the water would look red...