How To Use Fluxion In A Sentence

  • Though events and the effluxion of time would soon sweep this away, one does wonder if there had been a more emollient response from Parliament and the British Government and greater willingness to compromise whether matters might have turned out rather differently. American Democracy or European Oligarchy?
  • Three of the ladies made it through the first ward, with its cases of scrofula, scabies, eczema, defluxions, and stinking pyemia, before deciding that their charitable inclinations could be entirely satisfied by a donation to L'Hôpital, and fleeing back to the dispensary to shed the rough hopsacking gowns with which we had been furnished. Dragonfly in Amber
  • For when a defluxion of cold phlegm takes place on the lungs and heart, the blood is chilled, and the veins, being violently chilled, palpitate in the lungs and heart, and the heart palpitates, so that from this necessity asthma and orthopnoea supervene. On The Sacred Disease
  • He calls the quantity generated by a motion a fluent, and its rate of generation a fluxion.
  • For when a defluxion of cold phlegm takes place on the lungs and heart, the blood is chilled, and the veins, being violently chilled, palpitate in the lungs and heart, and the heart palpitates, so that from this necessity asthma and orthopnoea supervene. On The Sacred Disease
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  • Any failure to recall that incident on Mr. Duncan's part is the simple result of the effluxion of the nineteen intervening years.
  • He demanded a retraction saying that he had never heard of the calculus of fluxions until he had read the works of Wallis.
  • Those evils of Athens then, which were found in very deed somewhat later to be the infirmity of Greece as a whole, when, though its versatile gifts of intellect might constitute it the teacher of its eventual masters, it was found too incoherent politically to hold its own against Rome: -- those evils of Athens, of Greece, came from an exaggerated assertion of the fluxional, flamboyant, centrifugal Ionian element in the Hellenic character. Plato and Platonism
  • He integrated Leibniz's differential calculus and Newton's method of fluxions into mathematical analysis.
  • If the seed remain within for seven days then it is certain that conception has taken place; for it is during that period that what is known as effluxion takes place. The History of Animals
  • He indulged himself in indolence and social pleasure, but was at the same time much devoted to reading; and enjoyed a tolerable good state of health, although often incommoded with a fluxion of rheum upon the eyes. The Lives of the Twelve Caesars, Volume 02: Augustus
  • Mademoiselle de Nantes is in fairly good health, yet it looks as if a return of her fluxion were likely. Court Memoirs of France Series — Complete
  • Leibniz demanded a retraction saying that he had never heard of the calculus of fluxions until he had read the works of Wallis.
  • You should put persons on a course of hellebore who are troubled with a defluxion from the head. On Regimen In Acute Diseases
  • This is not the sort of evidence that will suffer by way of effluxion of time.
  • Just before the squadron weighed anchor, Mr. Fluxion went on board of the galiot, and informed the skipper that all the expenses of the repairs of his vessel would be paid by the students of the institution. Dikes and Ditches Young America in Holland and Belguim
  • In 1665, he developed the principles of his theory of gravitation, worked out fluxional calculus, devised instruments for grinding lenses to aspherical shapes, decomposed solar light into its component colors.
  • The mathematics curriculum grew accordingly to include algebra, trigonometry, and sometimes even Newton's fluxional calculus.
  • For it does not receive the spirits as much breath as he needs until the defluxion of phlegm be mastered, and being heated is distributed to the veins, then it ceases from its palpitation and difficulty of breathing, and this takes place as soon as it obtains an abundant supply; and this will be more slowly, provided the defluxion be more abundant, or if it be less, more quickly. On The Sacred Disease
  • But should the defluxion make its way to the heart, the person is seized with palpitation and asthma, the chest becomes diseased, and some also have curvature of the spine. On The Sacred Disease
  • He had written his essay on fluxions, described their application to fluents and tangents, and devised a plan for finding the radius of curvity in crooked lines. Little Journeys to the Homes of the Great - Volume 12 Little Journeys to the Homes of Great Scientists
  • About the twenty-first, weight generally in the left side, with pain; slight urine thick, muddy, and reddish; when allowed to stand, had no sediment; in other respects felt lighter; fever not gone; fauces painful from the commencement, and red; uvula retracted; defluxion remained acrid, pungent, and saltish throughout. Of The Epidemics
  • The fluxion of a fluent x is denoted by x·, and its moment, or “infinitely small increment accruing in an infinitely short time o”, by x·o. Continuity and Infinitesimals
  • Berkeley's arguments are directed chiefly against the Newtonian fluxional calculus.
  • The horse “had a defluxion from the nose at the time of the bargain,” but McFarland “assured Newman it was no more than the ordinary distemper to which colts are subject.” A History of American Law
  • De quadratura curvarum he remarks that there is no necessity to introduce into the method of fluxions any argument about infinitely small quantities. Continuity and Infinitesimals
  • With the effluxion of 42 years, it has been difficult to contact many of the creditors with death, bankruptcies and relocations intervening.
  • Such are the symptoms when the defluxion is upon the lungs and heart; but if it be upon the bowels, the person is attacked with diarrhoea. On The Sacred Disease
  • There is something equivocal in all the words in use to express the excellence of manners and social cultivation, because the quantities are fluxional, and the last effect is assumed by the senses as the cause. Essays: Second Series (1844)
  • About the twenty-first, weight generally in the left side, with pain; slight urine thick, muddy, and reddish; when allowed to stand, had no sediment; in other respects felt lighter; fever not gone; fauces painful from the commencement, and red; uvula retracted; defluxion remained acrid, pungent, and saltish throughout. Of The Epidemics
  • (Art. 98.) the limit - ing ratio of sr: st being a ratio of equality, the second fluxions of the ordinates are equal (Art. 96.); hence, the second fluxion of the ordinate is the same, whether we regard the curve or circle. The principles of fluxions : designed for the use of students in the university
  • Berkeley's arguments are directed chiefly against the Newtonian fluxional calculus. Continuity and Infinitesimals
  • The fauces were not very irritable, nor were they troubled with any saltish humors; but there were viscid, white, liquid, frothy, and copious defluxions from the head. Of The Epidemics
  • What is called effluxion is a destruction of the embryo within the first week, while abortion occurs up to the fortieth day; and the greater number of such embryos as perish do so within the space of these forty days. The History of Animals
  • Last weeks term was effluxion of time, which is defined as: Legal Definitions
  • About the twenty-first, weight generally in the left side, with pain; slight urine thick, muddy, and reddish; when allowed to stand, had no sediment; in other respects felt lighter; fever not gone; fauces painful from the commencement, and red; uvula retracted; defluxion remained acrid, pungent, and saltish throughout. Of The Epidemics
  • Their bodies continually going up and down upon perpetual fluxion, they never could live if their minds did the same, like the minds of stationary landsmen. Mary Anerley
  • From that journey he never returned alive, being attacked with a fatal fluxion of the lungs at a great public banquet given in his honor by Count Florida Blanca. Calvert of Strathore
  • All is as unsubstantial, as vague and shadowy, as Coleridge's "image of a rock," or Bishop Berkeley's "ghost of a departed quantity," as he once defined a fluxion. Life: Its True Genesis
  • This questionable success was sufficient to lead M. de Puységur, a few days after, to try his hand on a young peasant of the name of Victor, who was suffering with a severe fluxion upon the chest. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 62, No. 382, October 1847
  • When any of these things occur, the body immediately shivers, the person becoming speechless cannot draw his breath, but the breath (pneuma) stops, the brain is contracted, the blood stands still, and thus the excretion and defluxion of the phlegm take place. On The Sacred Disease
  • But how are we to explain the reaction of this fluxional body on the animal? Literary Remains, Volume 1
  • Was it then a necessary thing, that decomposition of the great cities which have governed the world, that affluxion of every passion, every desire, every gratification, that accumulation of reeking soil from all parts of the world, there where, in beauty and intelligence, blooms the flower of civilisation? The Three Cities Trilogy: Paris, Complete
  • For all symbols are fluxional; all language is vehicular and transitive, and is good, as ferries and horses are, for conveyance, not as farms and houses are, for homestead. X. Essays. The Poet. 1844
  • Then, like an overloaded video screen it slowly, slowly became a nauseous fluxion of repulsive colors-and it was squirming! The Dragon Lensman
  • Three of the ladies made it through the first ward, with its cases of scrofula, scabies, eczema, defluxions, and stinking pyemia, before deciding that their charitable inclinations could be entirely satisfied by a donation to L'Hôpital, and fleeing back to the dispensary to shed the rough hopsacking gowns with which we had been furnished. Dragonfly in Amber
  • For Newton integration consisted of finding fluents for a given fluxion so the fact that integration and differentiation were inverses was implied.
  • The fauces were not very irritable, nor were they troubled with any saltish humors; but there were viscid, white, liquid, frothy, and copious defluxions from the head. Of The Epidemics
  • The second version occurs as Corollary 2 to Proposition 7 and was thought of as a method of expanding solutions of fluxional equations in infinite series.
  • In particular, he covers fluxional organic molecules, fluxional metal carbonyls, the discovery of agostic hydrogens, arene complexes of lanthanides and actinides, and ï ½ 2, h, h-C 2 H 4 complexes.
  • I still must assert that this discovery appears to me to be as important for the middle of the nineteenth century as the discovery of fluxions [the calculus] was for the close of the seventeenth.
  • Oederna was to be treated by taking a remedy such as Diacatholicon to divert the fluxion of humour.
  • Digesting its contents, particularly in the given form (in fluxion instead of normal calculus) could have taken months, if not years. Kant's Philosophical Development
  • About fifteen hundred pounds 'weight of artificial and compound magnets are so disposed and arranged as to be continually pouring forth in an ever-flowing circle inconceivable and irrestibly powerful tides of the magnetic effluxion, which is well known to have Aphrodisiacs and Anti-aphrodisiacs: Three Essays on the Powers of Reproduction
  • Despite the effluxion of almost two years, the arbitration has not yet really got off the starting line.
  • Whether the destruction of such a traditional family is a genie which successive governments have allowed to get out of the bottle and cannot now be put back in is something which can only be shown after a considerable effluxion of time. A Right Royal Rebuke?
  • And in defluxions upon the throat, from which are formed hoarseness, cynanche, crysipelas, and pneumonia, all these have at first saltish, watery, and acrid discharges, and with these the diseases gain strength. On Ancient Medicine
  • There is something equivocal in all the words in use to express the excellence of manners and social cultivation, because the qualities are fluxional, and the last effect is assumed by the senses as the cause. Essays by Ralph Waldo Emerson
  • I reject the submission that the right to apply lapsed through effluxion of time.
  • And in defluxions upon the throat, from which are formed hoarseness, cynanche, crysipelas, and pneumonia, all these have at first saltish, watery, and acrid discharges, and with these the diseases gain strength. On Ancient Medicine
  • It is widely recognised in customary international law that the wrecks of warships are entitled to Sovereign Immunity, so they cannot be salvaged without the consent of their Flag State (here the UK) and that title (ownership) is not lost through the effluxion of time, so no question of abandonment of the wreck of HMS Victory by the UK governmet arises. Odyssey’s Never Ending Quest for Treasure
  • It follows that on August 17, 1979, the plaintiff's action was not barred by the effluxion of time.
  • Hence it is manifest, that, in general, when the fluxional equation has an even number of equal roots, one of those roots gives (A) neither a maximum nor minimum; but when it has an odd number, that root gives (A) either a maximum or minimum. The principles of fluxions : designed for the use of students in the university

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