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irritative

ADJECTIVE
  1. (used of physical stimuli) serving to stimulate or excite
    an irritative agent

How To Use irritative In A Sentence

  • Results Wei-chi embrocation had no irritative reaction to intact skin, but has mild stimulation to injured skin.
  • an irritative agent
  • In the first class of diseases two kinds of fevers were described, one from excess, and the other from defect of irritation; and were in consequence termed irritative, and inirritative fevers. Zoonomia, Vol. II Or, the Laws of Organic Life
  • The GAO report pdf identifies the main adverse health concerns from clothing treated with formaldehyde as a variety of irritative, allergenic and sensitization reactions on skin -- some of which can engage the immune system. Bill Chameides: The Wrinkle in No-Iron Shirts
  • Those trains or tribes of associate motions, whose introductory link consists of an irritative motion, are termed irritative associations; as when the muscles of the eyelids close the eye in common nictitation. Zoonomia, Vol. II Or, the Laws of Organic Life
  • Those trains or tribes of associate motions, whose introductory link consists of an irritative motion, are termed irritative associations; as when the muscles of the eyelids close the eye in common nictitation. Zoonomia, Vol. II Or, the Laws of Organic Life
  • XXXII. and termed irritative fever, it frequently happens that pain is excited by the violence of the fibrous contractions; and other new motions are then superadded, in consequence of sensation, which we shall term febris sensitiva, or sensitive fever. Zoonomia, Vol. I Or, the Laws of Organic Life
  • The single biggest mistake that the Soviets made, according to Ambassador Kabulov, was letting the Soviet military footprint become too large: "The more foreign troops you have roaming the country, the more the irritative allergy toward them is going to be provoked. Tom Andrews: White House Ducks Afghanistan Exit
  • Irritated eyes: as the name suggests, it implies dry eyes, burning eyes, light sensitivity, eyestrain are the most pesky and irritative symptoms that trouble the computer user.
  • By these means the irritative movements of the stomach are excited into greater action than is natural; and in consequence all the irritative tribes and trains of motion, which are catenated with them, become susceptible of stronger action from their accustomed stimuli; because these motions are excited both by their usual irritation, and by their association with the increased actions of the stomach and lacteals. Zoonomia, Vol. I Or, the Laws of Organic Life
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