congelation

NOUN
  1. the process of congealing; solidification by (or as if by) freezing
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How To Use congelation In A Sentence

  • Eventually, the ice thickens into a more stable sheet with a smooth bottom surface, called congelation ice. Sea ice
  • These congelations, through their weakness, are unable to obtain in Mercury, and therefore, on that account, he altogether contemns them.
  • The thermometer should be rubbed quickly up and down in the mixture in order to cause a rapid congelation throughout, with its subsequent liberation of heat.
  • Unlike the congelation process, sheet ice formed from consolidated pancakes has a rough bottom surface.
  • In order to express the value of the linen as a congelation of human labour, that value must be expressed as having objective existence, as being something materially different from the linen itself, and yet a something common to the linen and all other commodities. Skzbrust: Capital Volume 1 Part 1 Chapter 1 Section 3A2.
  • On the other side, _Vitriol_ likewise is a Salt, manifesting it self in a small quantity, but fluxible and open, therefore its Salt cannot yield such a hard congelation unto its appropriated Metal, as the other can; although all the Salts of Metals grew out of one certain Root, and out of one Of Natural and Supernatural Things Also of the first Tincture, Root, and Spirit of Metals and Minerals, how the same are Conceived, Generated, Brought forth, Changed, and Augmented.
  • Accordingly we all left the house after breakfast, following the track marked (H), which led us precipitously down, till we landed on the surface of the large crater, an immense sheet of scoriaceous lava cooled suddenly from a state of fusion; the upheaved waves and deep hollows evidencing that congelation has taken place before the mighty agitation has subsided. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 62, Number 361, November, 1845.
  • Deleuze explains that Ideas precipitate all the circumstances, points of fusion, congelation or condensation in a sublime occasion, Kairos, which makes the solution explode like something abrupt, brutal and revolutionary. Notes on 'Repetition, Representation and Revolution: Deleuze and Blake's _America_'
  • This theory might extend further with perfect consistency, to account for icebergs of fresh water by repeated congelations, for it is plausible to assume that there are air strata of hot and cold at altitudes above the poles, passing through which the sea water would alternate from rain to hail, until the chemical change to fresh water is complete.
  • And it is easy to perceive the cause of this, namely, that it contains in itself the congelations of the other six metals, out of which it is made externally into one most compact body…
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