How To Use Ebonite In A Sentence
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Rotary furnaces can use any carbon source such as coal, coke, or ebonite as reducing agent, and they can use a variety of fuels, such as oil, coal, or gas.
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One way that they can be produced is as follows: A sharp-pointed needle is placed perpendicular to a non-conducting plate, such as of resin, ebonite, or glass, with its point very near to or in contact with the plate, and a high voltage Leyden jar a type of capacitor or a static electricity generator is discharged into the needle.
Lichtenberg Figures
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All flutes, for example, whether they are made of glass, ivory, ebonite, or metal, or whether they have a duct, are classified as 421.
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The platinoid wire is insulated and the covering of silk that insulates it is wound on the ebonite bobbins just where my finger is.
A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
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The first synthetic material to be used in flute-making was ebonite, also known as vulcanite.
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The first synthetic material to be used in flute-making was ebonite, also known as vulcanite.
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Black chairs with the East German equivalent of PVC upholstery and chrome legs, an ebonite console on one wall with some of the panels illuminated.
The Striker Portfolio
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I may mention as a curious thing that these ravenous animals, that devoured everything they came across, even to the ebonite points of our ski-sticks, never made any attempt to break into the provision cases.
The South Pole~ At the Pole
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The further experiment led to the coherer, which is simply a glass or ebonite tube containing metallic filings which connect the two ends of a wire conductor entering the tube.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 2: Assizes-Browne
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Corresponding to the jaw is a built-up section, almost a facial codpiece, of iron and ebonite, perhaps housing a radio unit, thrusting forward in black fatality.
Gravity's Rainbow
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The platinoid wire is insulated and the covering of silk that insulates it is wound on the ebonite bobbins just where my finger is.
A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
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The addition of about fifty per cent. changes the rubber to a hard black substance known as "ebonite," or "hard rubber.
Commercial Geography A Book for High Schools, Commercial Courses, and Business Colleges
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At ordinary temperatures ebonite is hard and brittle and breaks with a well-marked conchoidal fracture.
On Laboratory Arts
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a suitable non-volatile or slightly volatile "solvent," such as nitro - naphthalene, di-nitro-benzene, nitro-toluene, or its homologues; products are obtained varying from a gelatinous consistency to the hardness of ebonite.
Nitro-Explosives: A Practical Treatise
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Some of the older anti-Byronists were able to fool with their parameters in systematic ways that would show up on the ebonite meters under the Swiss mountain: there were even a few self-immolations, hoping to draw the hit men down.
Gravity's Rainbow
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There were conspiratorial glances in his direction, because he had the expression he adopted on big days: his set look, his pipe at an angle, squeezed so tightly between his teeth that he had been known to snap the ebonite tip.
Maigret Bides His Time
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Rotary furnaces can use any carbon source such as coal, coke, or ebonite as reducing agent, and they can use a variety of fuels, such as oil, coal, or gas.