absolute alcohol

NOUN
  1. pure ethyl alcohol (containing no more than 1% water)
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How To Use absolute alcohol In A Sentence

  • It is not readily soluble in absolute alcohol and 95 per cent is not as good an extractant as water. The Vitamine Manual
  • Animals have been recovered from this state after immersion in liquid helium, absolute alcohol, brine, and ether.
  • Transfer the sections in turn to a capsule containing absolute alcohol (to dehydrate) and to one containing xylol or oil of cloves (to clear). The Elements of Bacteriological Technique A Laboratory Guide for Medical, Dental, and Technical Students. Second Edition Rewritten and Enlarged.
  • The preparations included specimens of choleraic dejections dried on covering glasses, stained with fuchsin or methyl-blue, and examined with oil immersion, one-twelfth, and Abbe's condenser; also sections of intestine preserved in absolute alcohol, and stained with methyl-blue. Scientific American Supplement, No. 458, October 11, 1884
  • All insecticide concentrations were prepared in absolute alcohol and the larval bioassay was carried out according to the standard WHO procedure.
  • absolute alcohol
  • It is soluble in amylic alcohol, scarcely so in absolute alcohol. The Medicinal Plants of the Philippines
  • This is a modified mixture of Carnoy's fluid containing absolute alcohol, chloroform, and glacial acetic acid.
  • Absolute alcohol 60 c.c. Allow to stand twenty-four hours, then centrifugalise thoroughly and decant the supernatant fluid into a well-stoppered bottle. The Elements of Bacteriological Technique A Laboratory Guide for Medical, Dental, and Technical Students. Second Edition Rewritten and Enlarged.
  • (This estimate would equal in an adult man an amount equal to the absolute alcohol in two or three ounces of whisky or brandy.) "These investigations of Professor Martin, being directly corroborated by those of Drs. Ringer and Sainsbury, complete the series of demonstrations needed to show the actual effects of alcohol on the cardiac, as well as on the vasomotor, and also on the direct contractability of the muscular structure, when supplied with blood containing all gradations in the relative proportion of alcohol, leaving no longer any basis for the idea, popular both in and out of the profession, that alcohol in any of its forms is capable of increasing, even temporarily the force or efficiency of the heart's action. Alcohol: A Dangerous and Unnecessary Medicine, How and Why What Medical Writers Say
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