How To Use Flocculate In A Sentence
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By the end of the 19th century, a whole word family had been formed, including the adjective “flocculent,” the noun “floccule,” and the verb “flocculate.”
Flocculate | clusterflock
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Yeast strains grown to saturation in 10 ml liquid medium overnight and were deflocculated by two washes in sodium citrate.
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These can be flocculated forming a High Density Sludge which once settled can give a relatively clear overflow, which is discharged to the rivers (the HDS process).
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The samples were rolled and then the total clay-rich sample was deflocculated and deslimed by continuous washing under gently running water.
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When I pour the pints of flocculated yeast left in the bottom of my carboy down the sink, I feel a twinge of regret.
Archive 2008-10-01
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During fermentation, yeast cells flocculate and either rise to the top or sink to the bottom of the vat.
Flocculate | clusterflock
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By the end of the 19th century, a whole word family had been formed, including the adjective “flocculent,” the noun “floccule,” and the verb “flocculate.”
Flocculate | clusterflock
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The property of cation exchange in clays is used in a common agricultural process whereby the dispersed mineral fabric of a heavy clay soil is flocculated by the addition of calcium to improve the workability.
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Syneresis cracks can develop in clays that have flocculated before settling.
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The Word of the Day for January 20, 2009 is: flocculate • \FLAH-kyuh-layt\ • verb
Flocculate | clusterflock
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So what Samantha Joye and others are describing, this sort of flocculated oil, sounds very like that sort of a substance.
Assessing The BP Spill's Impact
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Chitin and chitosan can adsorb organic compounds by forming chemical bond or flocculate organic compounds as a cationic polyelectrolyte.
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Patty, you are not yet ready for the transubstantiation of glauconitic flocculated basalt and therefore I can only explain to not explain.
First Contact
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Under such conditions the stability of soil aggregates will decrease and clays will break down and deflocculate.
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By the end of the 19th century, a whole word family had been formed, including the adjective “flocculent,” the noun “floccule,” and the verb “flocculate.”
Flocculate | clusterflock
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CONAN: I don't think we've ever used the word flocculate on the program before.
Assessing The BP Spill's Impact
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- Clays containing sulfates are also difficult to deflocculate.
7. Slip casting
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The chemist flocculated the suspended material
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When using closed fermentation, rack the beer off of the flocculated yeast when the krausen stops flowing out of the blow-off hose.
SECRETS FROM THE MASTER BREWERS
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And one of their foods is something called marine snow, which is a sort of a flocculate particle, fluffy-like stuff that settles down.
Assessing The BP Spill's Impact
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- Clays containing montmorillonite (like bentonite) contain high amounts of colloidal silica that may cause the slip to gel and in general are difficult to deflocculate.
7. Slip casting
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When the bitumen emulsion is in contact with the surface of the mineral aggregate, bitumen droplets must preferentially flocculate onto the mineral surface if the emulsion is to break and spread over the surface.
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A quick Latin lesson: flocci is derived from floccus, literally a tuft of wool and the source of English words like flocculate, but figuratively in Latin something trivial; pili is likewise the plural of pilus, a hair, which we have inherited in words like depilatory, but which in Latin could meant a whit, jot, trifle or generally something insignificant; nihili is from nihil, nothing, as in words like nihilism and annihilate; nauci just means worthless. source
The Floccinaucinihilipilificators
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Yeast cultures were pelleted, deflocculated twice by washing with buffer and resuspended in the same buffer at a density of 10 cells/ml.
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By causing soil particles to flocculate - bunch together - some chemicals improve the soil structure in order to combat the effects of compaction.
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A quick Latin lesson: flocci is derived from floccus, literally a tuft of wool and the source of English words like flocculate, but figuratively in Latin something trivial; pili is likewise the plural of pilus, a hair, which we have inherited in words like depilatory, but which in Latin could meant a whit, jot, trifle or generally something insignificant; nihili is from nihil, nothing, as in words like nihilism and annihilate; nauci just means worthless. source
The Floccinaucinihilipilificators
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the protoplasms flocculated