How To Use Nourishment In A Sentence

  • He took nourishment from press conferences, where he was notably generous, but not bountiful enough to promise a match.
  • After a cut on the face or an exudation into the lungs, the loose tissues and multiple vessels allow the proliferating cells to obtain rich nourishment; absorption can take place readily, and the part regains its normal condition entirely, while a bruise at the heel or at the withers finds a dense, inextensible tissue where the multiplying elements and exuded fluids choke up all communication, and the parts die Special Report on Diseases of the Horse
  • The link between a specific shoot and a specific root is not clear, but each has a part to play in the overall growth and nourishment of the plant.
  • Now a common-place person would have been satisfied with the recommendation of the medical man, who looks but to the one thing needful, which is a sufficient and wholesome supply of nourishment for the child; but Mr Easy was a philosopher, and had latterly taken to craniology, and he descanted very learnedly with the Doctor upon the effect of his only son obtaining his nutriment from an unknown source. Mr. Midshipman Easy
  • I'm proud of my baby body, knowing that it gave my son a comfy vessel in which to gestate and has been the source of all his nourishment since birth.
Linguix Browser extension
Fix your writing
on millions of websites
Linguix writing coach
  • Since you, the parent is the baby's primary source of physical and emotional nourishment, your well being can contribute to the presence or absence of colic.
  • If this congestion is not cleared up quickly, the blood will clot and arteries that bring the tissues their necessary nourishment will become plugged and the tissues will die.
  • Scrounging time for faith nourishment can press a doubter into drivenness—so that in our wild attempts to make the most of every minute of our time, we may lose eternity. If I Really Believe, Why Do I Have These Doubts?
  • Art was hailed as an inner, ethical necessity, primary nourishment for the soul.
  • The citizens, clearly, are the distributors of bodily nourishment, circulating their life-giving vigor even to the heart and foreclosing the possibility of that organ exercising arbitrary rule over the body.
  • Also, he knew he needed bodily nourishment to bring up his declining health.
  • We may value the activity of eating to the degree that it provides nourishment.
  • The soil provides nourishment for plant roots.
  • The lady was blue, and in great pain from cramp, and the poor unweaned infant was roaring for the nourishment which had failed. A Lady's Life in the Rocky Mountains
  • When the spleen is weak, the body will not be able to use the nourishment available in food.
  • Royal patronage in China certainly had an aesthetic edge, so essential to the nourishment of art, even if generated by peculiar foibles.
  • Seawalls, groins, and other manmade structures (including beach nourishment projects) can potentially reduce short-term, immediate erosion risk.
  • Indeed, even the general survey of the results of nuclear blackmail efforts against non-nuclear states by nuclear states provides meagre nourishment to the claim about their value as coercive political instruments.
  • Its functions are viscidity, nourishment, the binding of joints, the solidarity of the body, and the maintenance of sexual vigour.
  • The radical or innate, is daily supplied by nourishment, which some call cambium, and make those secondary humours of ros and gluten to maintain it: or acquisite, to maintain these four first primary humours, coming and proceeding from the first concoction in the liver, by which means chylus is excluded. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • They can provide nourishment, too. Times, Sunday Times
  • A day cannot live in infamy without the nourishment of rage.
  • The best nourishment for your writing is the following blend.
  • While you’re at it, ask the misfit, the prisoner, or even the naughty child to explain why Judas—already identified as the betrayer of Christ—was also given the bread and wine, the body and blood, the nourishment and the promise? Beginner’s Grace
  • See the bean plantlet, big, sturdy, fellow, is still clinging to its seed leaves or cotyledons, its baby nourishment. The Library of Work and Play: Gardening and Farming.
  • But the procedure kept being postponed and he suffered for 96 hours with no food and just a saline drip for nourishment. The Sun
  • Most of the commercially valuable wild species derive their nourishment from the rootlets of living trees in a mutually beneficial relationship called mycorrhiza.
  • He gave me an amuse-gueule, a mini gazpacho, while I was in the kitchen, and a little orange jelly which was delicious, but those were Hunca Munca titbits, not serious nourishment.
  • She stresses the importance of protein in diets to stop cravings and satisfy the body's need for nourishment.
  • They paralyse snails with a lethal injection which liquidises their insides and then they suck out the nourishment.
  • The retreat gives me a kind of spiritual nourishment.
  • Fear disarranges circulation of the blood and the nourishment of muscle and nerve. Civics and Health
  • The makers of meat extracts and other foods, either from their own ignorance of modern research or their wish to take advantage of the lack of knowledge and prejudice of the public, call proteid matter alone nourishment. The Chemistry of Food and Nutrition
  • her nourishment of the orphans saved many lives
  • While affluent regions and social classes struggle with surplus production and surplus consumption, close to one fifth of the global population lives in constant under-nourishment.
  • Plants get nourishment from the soil.
  • She explained these as exercise, nourishment and intellectual stimulation.
  • We're blowing all this money to build houses and ruin habitat with so-called beach renourishment and jetties, groins and seawalls.
  • The vegetative power, whose functions are nourishment, growth and reproduction, is related to appetite, and is called the appetitive soul. A History of Mediaeval Jewish Philosophy
  • True silence is the rest of the mind; it is to the spirit what sleep is to the body, nourishment and refreshment. William Penn 
  • You are left to admire the ingredients without finding much nourishment in the meal itself. Times, Sunday Times
  • Though I gained no particular motherly nourishment from my years at the University of Michigan, I for one am pleased that Hugh Hewitt is not among our distinguished undergraduate alumni. The Volokh Conspiracy » Self-hating Wolverine
  • Use it to tame dry hair or apply sparingly when wet for intense nourishment. Times, Sunday Times
  • He had that pinched look which suggests poverty and lack of nourishment.
  • Most recently, the company jumped into the smoothies market, rolling out Yoplait Nouriche, a single-serve non-fat yogurt smoothie, boasting ‘all the nourishment of a meal.’
  • We must never stop dreaming. Dreams provide nourishment for the soul, just as a meal does for the body. Paulo Coelho 
  • Some micro-organisms began to manufacture their own nourishment and at the same time provide a food-chain base for all other emerging creatures.
  • Big clumps can become starved at the centre and it is worth dividing them in autumn so that the individual bulbs can find more nourishment. Times, Sunday Times
  • For these birds, a soda fountain is a literal description of their source of nourishment -- and they derive their colour from their food. THE EARTH: An Intimate History
  • In echidnas, the egg is carried in a pouch on the female's belly until the young hatches, at which point the barely-developed young must find a mammary gland and latch onto it for nourishment.
  • The ground was ploughed, and the seed sank beneath it from the sower's hand in spring; the earth was soft and sapful to a sufficient depth, and the roots of the springing corn found ample room to range in; the soil was clean, and its fatness, not shared by usurping weeds, went all to the nourishment of the sown seed: therefore in the balmy air and under the beaming sun it is ripe to-day, and ready to fill the reaper's bosom. The Parables of Our Lord
  • Now a commonplace person would have been satisfied with the recommendation of the medical man, who looks but to the one thing needful, which is a sufficient and wholesome supply of nourishment for the child; but Mr Easy was a philosopher, and had latterly taken to craniology, and he descanted very learnedly with the doctor upon the effect of his only son obtaining his nutriment from an unknown source. Mr. Midshipman Easy
  • As long as we get the nourishment necessary to survive we live, when we don't, we die.
  • The pallor is the pallor of hardship, often of the lack of the right kind of nourishment, but the stillness is not the result of inward personal calm and peace. A Circuit Rider's Wife
  • They cease to receive nourishment, stop releasing toxins, die prematurely & spill micronuclei fragments into a sort of tunor bank account. Life as a Japanese employee
  • kwashiorkor" describes the malnourishment of a child weaned too early because his or her mother became pregnant again too quickly. Chapter 19
  • Plants draw nourishment from the soil.
  • Can plants obtain adequate nourishment from such poor soil?
  • Part raconteuse, part avant-garde musician, and part social commentator, she provides nourishment to a diverse audience with equal measures of irony and tenderness.
  • She has been comparatively sparing in the room, and the nourishment necessary to rear them.
  • If we could give every individual the right amount of nourishment and exercise, not too little and not too much, we would have found the safest way to health. Hippocrates 
  • By the ancients man was called a microcosm, from his representing the macrocosm, that is, the universe in its whole complex; but it is not known at the present day why man was so called by the ancients, for no more of the universe or macrocosm is manifest in him than that he derives nourishment and bodily life from its animal and vegetable kingdoms, and that he is kept in a living condition by its heat, sees by its light, and hears and breathes by its atmospheres. Angelic Wisdom Concerning the Divine Love and the Divine Wisdom
  • Not surprisingly, malnourishment and illness like fevers, coughs, malaria, scabies and diarrhoea are common.
  • It is therefore obligatory to the extent to which, and for as long as, it is shown to accomplish its proper finality, which is the hydration and nourishment of the patient. Is it a matter of opinon whether this is a matter of opinion?
  • Use it to tame dry hair or apply sparingly when wet for intense nourishment. Times, Sunday Times
  • The gelatigenous tissue contains a number of special component elements, which require special nourishment through proper diet; and in view of the fact that the gelatigenous tissue pervades so many of the various organs, its effect upon the functional abilities of a great number of them is obvious. Valere Aude Dare to Be Healthy, Or, The Light of Physical Regeneration
  • Although food is for nourishment and growth of the body it also plays a key role in our social development.
  • Older ones can be given a flask of soup made with milk for extra nourishment during winter months.
  • Nowhere, perhaps, is this as exasperating as in the terrible continuation of massive hunger and undernourishment in India.
  • Her figure was thin from undernourishment and her complexion a morose sickly gray.
  • The plan spends the bulk of its renourishment, artificial dunes, seawalls, groins and repairs to existing structures.
  • Forty per cent of children under five in developing countries are short for their age because of undernourishment.
  • These may be viviparous, in which case the mother's body provides nourishment to the embryo, or ovoviviparous, in which case the eggs develop without additional nourishment inside the mother.
  • Parenting and education are to provide the nourishment and care that allow these potentials to unfold.
  • My feeling is that there is a lack of spiritual nourishment among younger people.
  • Why is it then that the science of the sanative power of nature, as well as medical science, is still in doubt in regard to the relation that must absolutely exist between the separate component parts of our nourishment in order to obtain normal healthy sanguification? Valere Aude Dare to Be Healthy, Or, The Light of Physical Regeneration
  • After fasting the rested digestive system can work with increased efficiency to provide good quality nourishment for the process of regeneration. The Hayfever Handbook - a summer survival guide
  • He needed the extra nourishment that would come from those few dollars to live. Christianity Today
  • Must people identity coldness with hostility and deprivation; warmth with friendliness, nourishment, closeness and intimacy.
  • The interior joy we feel when we have done a good deed is the nourishment the soul requires. Albert Schweitzer 
  • A library can provide the mind with nourishment, pleasure, yet prove a source of tedium and dismay.
  • If this be the case the parasitism is the reverse of that which occurs in Cuscuta, in which the plantule draws its first nourishment from the earth, relinquishing this when sufficiently developed to enable it to draw its supply from other plants. Journals of Travels in Assam, Burma, Bhootan, Afghanistan and the Neighbouring Countries
  • Her sister could not eat the tough "gumboots" and her only nourishment was obtained from bread and black coffee. Where the Sun Swings North
  • One of the main functions -- if not _the_ main function -- of the red acid, it seemed, was to act as a powerful digestive juice for His Majesty's food, predigesting it before it was taken into the feeble body for nourishment. The Raid on the Termites
  • The Lord supplied nourishment at the hands of an angel.
  • The holidays provide a different sort of nourishment - one that feeds the soul and indulges the senses.
  • It requires oxygen food, light food, physical "tactile" food, hydrating water food and solid alimentary food, all as sources of nourishment. Vaishali: Consciousness: What You Don't Know Might Kill You
  • On each of the branches I put little tags with notes about cultivating our future love and marriage, I made him read each one before he planted the bush, Now our rosebush is a reminder of our love and how, with tenderness, nourishment, and care, it will continue to bloom and grow. No Time For Sex
  • These sad, determine men have found that their one-time hobby has become a must have matter of sustenance, like karmic nourishment for their soul.
  • During pregnancy her unborn child strips her of nourishment for its own metabolic needs, so she becomes still weaker.
  • And yet in a sense, music is a love-food -- in the sense I mean, that there is love-nourishment in tubes of paint, which can perpetuate your beauty, my fair readeress; or in ink-bottles all ebon with Portuguese sonnets and erotic rondeaux; or in tubs of plaster of Paris, or in bargain-counterfuls of dress goods to add the last word to a woman's beauty. The Love Affairs of Great Musicians, Volume 2
  • Young artists ransacked antique shops and archives to find spiritual nourishment beyond the groundwork that had been laid waste.
  • In this case the patient dies for want of nourishment; either in three or four weeks, of the inirritative fever; or without quick pulse, by what we have called paresis irritativa. Zoonomia, Vol. II Or, the Laws of Organic Life
  • It is not only annual competitions that offer nourishment. Times, Sunday Times
  • And supposing we should grant that this affection or disposition is the very thing which we call the appetite, it is probable that, by the operation of such kind of food as this, the nourishment may be made small, and so much of it as is convenient for Nature severed from the rest, so that the indigency proceeds not from the transmutation, but from the evacuation and purgation of the passages. Essays and Miscellanies
  • They are carnivorous, scavenging among carrion or preying on other molluscs, using their extensible proboscis, tipped with a radula, to reach into and extract nourishment from their victims.
  • Personally, I believe that the only possible way to prevent loose bowels is to take your nourishment intravenously, and that is far from safe! Is there a doctor in the house?
  • This group includes the suctorial lice, confined to mammals; they are strictly parasitic insects, being confined to their hosts constantly and deriving all their nourishment from them.
  • It is also necessary that the air should have access to the roots of plants, as they depend for their nourishment almost as much on the carbon and other elements which they absorb from the air, as on those which they obtain from the soil. The Lady's Country Companion: or, How to Enjoy a Country Life Rationally
  • Sugar gives quick relief to hunger but provides no lasting nourishment.
  • For spiritual nourishment there were halls of worship filled with statues of the Buddha.
  • Nourishment is provided to the vein wall by vasovasora, which enter through the adventitial layer.
  • Designing ways to protect valuable creative works is very much in the long-term best interests of consumers and indispensable to the nourishment of our nation's economy.
  • Growth of an organ, such as a buck's antlers, requires additional nourishment and that means additional blood flow.
  • His instincts tell him that is where he will find nourishment.
  • It is land set aside for the king's game, in which the nourishment of deer, wild swine and hares took precedence over the nourishment of human beings.
  • This apostrophises the palm tree as the source of nourishment, and something to be worshipped possibly a symbol for the Mother of God herself, but in any case further evidence of the earth ‘coming to the aid of the child’.
  • The problem was first managed with a sea wall and revetments, and there have been several beach-nourishment projects at roughly 10-year intervals.
  • Fig.  4.), the radicle had sunk deep into the earth, and sent out several shoots, each of which is furnished with a mouth to suck up nourishment from the soil; the function of the original leaves, therefore, being no longer required, they are gradually decaying, and the plumula is become a regular stem, shooting out small branches, and spreading its foliage. Conversations on Chemistry, V. 1-2 In Which the Elements of that Science Are Familiarly Explained and Illustrated by Experiments
  • This has little to do with true nourishment of body or soul.
  • Sugar gives quick relief to hunger but provides no lasting nourishment.
  • If an animal is to grow to maturity and propagate, it must be able to take in nourishment and to navigate its way through the world.
  • It has been a pleasure to work with David in bringing his project to fruition, and to witness the formation of a new and intriguing chapter in the ongoing history of Constable’s clouds, perhaps more cirrhus than cumulus, but certainly bound to illuminate a fertile art-historical landscape, as much as that landscape has evidently provided nourishment for David’s new work. Archive 2009-04-01
  • Can plants obtain adequate nourishment from such poor soil?
  • This parasitical plant has a trailing stem, not unlike the common ivy, but not so woody, by which it attaches itself to the trunks of trees, and sucks the moisture which their bark derives from the lichens and other cryptogamia, but without drawing nourishment from the tree itself, like the misletoe and loranthus. The Commercial Products of the Vegetable Kingdom Considered in Their Various Uses to Man and in Their Relation to the Arts and Manufactures; Forming a Practical Treatise & Handbook of Reference for the Colonist, Manufacturer, Merchant, and Consumer, o
  • I do not think that nourishment of my body should be at the expense of the suffering of another living being.
  • The tree extends its roots deep within the soil to draw the finest and the richest minerals and elements for its nourishment and growth irrespective of the type of soil.
  • The fig-tree here mentioned was blessed with the application of means, had time allowed it to receive the nourishment; but it outstood, withstood, overstood all, all that the husbandman did, all that the vine-dresser did. Works of John Bunyan — Volume 03
  • The sturdy roots dug deep into unyielding rocks and drew nourishment from the seemingly sterile soil.
  • A little light and nourishment can potentiate some truly magical creative forces. Marc Ian Barasch: Practicing 'Green Compassion': How Do You Stack Up?
  • As a child, she was starved of intellectual nourishment.
  • The mineral composition of the rock as well as the soil affects the nourishment of the vine.
  • True silence is the rest of the mind; it is to the spirit what sleep is to the body, nourishment and refreshment. William Penn 
  • Breast/Mother's milk is the best nourishment for a baby.
  • Spend all day in bed tomorrow, in the dark, with the windows shut and only a plastic beaker of water for nourishment, and you'll be fine.
  • Butterflies have an intimate relationship with flowering plants, which they pollinate, and themselves derive nourishment from the nectar.
  • Hunter killed and ate with careless, unthinking ease, for his real quest was for little Alba, not for the nourishment his body needed. THE ANCIENT AND SOLITARY REIGN
  • Who provides nourishment to the fowls in the air and who attends to their ailments and illness?
  • She brings with her the excrescence which is found upon the forehead of a new-cast foal, of the size of a dried fig, and which unless first eaten by the mare, the mother never admits her young to the nourishment of her milk. Lives of the Necromancers
  • What was once our sustenance has become carcinogenic and devoid of goodness and nourishment.
  • Nourishment for your cornea comes from your tears and the aqueous humor - the clear fluid that fills the space between your iris and cornea.
  • In fact, malnourishment is a complication with ulcerative colitis due to a poorly functioning bowel. Times, Sunday Times
  • Now, as I take it, the most natural and principal nourishment of heat is moisture, as it evidently appears from flames, which increase by the pouring in of oil, and from ashes, which are of the driest things in nature; for after the humidity is consumed by the fire, the terrene and grosser parts remain without any moisture at all. Symposiacs
  • In this discussion Buddhists draw nourishment and guidance from a centuries-old tradition of Christian meditative prayer and monastic practice.
  • 75% of the female population, including unjoined heifers, will attend, with nourishment.
  • The patient can specify in advance in his living will under what conditions nourishment, hydration or other life support should be withheld.
  • Gradually the blood vessels to the hip cut off nourishment to the head of the femur where it fits into the acetabulum.
  • The difference between Terri and these victims is that these people are not braindead and have been denied nourishment and hydration, that is a crime. Think Progress » “One of the Worst Abandonments of Americans on American Soil Ever”
  • Inside, the amnion encloses the embryo in a protected, moist environment in which nourishment is supplied by the yolk sac, and metabolic waste is stored by the allantois. Reptile
  • For instance, people demand food because of the nourishment it offers them.
  • Places with poor refrigeration or contaminated water sources rely on aseptically packaged milk for nourishment.
  • Holistic health care is a perfect technique for the nourishment of mind, body and spirit.
  • I continually find new nourishment in rereading them, and I never tire of teaching them. Insight Scoop | The Ignatius Press Blog:
  • They all offer white bread, middle-of-the-road ideas or experiences entirely lacking in intellectual or emotional nourishment.
  • Sugar gives quick relief to hunger but provides no lasting nourishment.
  • As the weather gets colder, your skin needs a hit of extra nourishment. Times, Sunday Times
  • The children would benefit from visiting the local "anganwadi", a government-sponsored care center for children and mothers, and part of a scheme created to provide nourishment to children under 6 years of age. NYT > Home Page
  • And yet, threaded through the radio schedules, there is intellectual nourishment. Times, Sunday Times
  • The workers' ignorance compounds their poverty: everywhere, failure to follow the most elementary rules of diet makes undernourishment worse.
  • After fasting the rested digestive system can work with increased efficiency to provide good quality nourishment for the process of regeneration. The Hayfever Handbook - a summer survival guide
  • When cooked and served as salsify or scorzonera, they are the whitest and sweetest of esculent roots, and afford a considerable portion of nourishment. The Field and Garden Vegetables of America Containing Full Descriptions of Nearly Eleven Hundred Species and Varietes; With Directions for Propagation, Culture and Use.
  • We're blowing all this money to build houses and ruin habitat with so-called beach renourishment and jetties, groins and seawalls.
  • It was an abrupt change; at first he relied on ready meals, which provided poor nourishment for both of them. Times, Sunday Times
  • In this schema, circulation was entirely centrifugal: blood moved only outward from the heart and liver to the various parts of the body, where it was consumed for nourishment.
  • But the procedure kept being postponed and he suffered for 96 hours with no food and just a saline drip for nourishment. The Sun
  • They maintain the functions of all the organs and are important in the development and nourishment of the body.
  • Materiality inheres in the world's existence as nourishment and jouissance - and something more. The Times Literary Supplement
  • He was unable to take nourishment for several days.
  • I had a good, strong and very robust constitution, perfectly able to take its nourishment from a vegetable source.
  • We must never stop dreaming. Dreams provide nourishment for the soul, just as a meal does for the body. Paulo Coelho 
  • Rhasis and [1360] Magninus discommend all fish, and say, they breed viscosities, slimy nutriment, little and humorous nourishment. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • Children have also become more sedentary, frequently relying on junk food for nourishment, all of which adds to the growing epidemic of obesity in the United States.
  • Adequate nourishment is critical when attempting any difficult mental and physical work.
  • The other (_f_) has no definite form, and serves merely as an organ of absorption, by means of which nourishment is supplied to the embryo from the prothallium; it is known as the foot. Elements of Structural and Systematic Botany For High Schools and Elementary College Courses
  • GLOSS: nere] nearer; yede] went; hett] promised; waite] take heed; baite] enticement, nourishment; in fere] together; dawngerouse] difficult of approach, haughty; farre] farther; narre] nearer Quia Amore Langueo
  • Current revision as of 06: 20, 8 February 2010 taxonomic Kingdom Animalia (also called Metazoa heterotrophs (i.e. they rely directly or indirectly on other organisms for their nourishment). Conservapedia - Recent changes [en]
  • These are most fair and beautiful to behold, most sweet and luscious to taste, but have little inward virtue or nourishment at all in them, not half that is in a Spanish camuesa, or English Kentish pippin [apple]. Pestilence and Headcolds: Encountering Illness in Colonial Mexico
  • What do tourists, nourishment, and futurists have in common?
  • But it's about finding the soul nourishment to deal with it all. Times, Sunday Times
  • Please bless this food to the nourishment of our bodies.
  • He simply wants to be on stage and in the spotlight, hip-hopping his way to stardom and never-ending nourishment.
  • They supposed that the air contained a principle proper for the support and nourishment of life, which they called pabulum vitae. Popular Lectures on Zoonomia Or The Laws of Animal Life, in Health and Disease
  • Each remnant of food, each rag of clothing, they brought home with joy; and the mouldiest piece of bread out of their bag was set aside for their own nourishment, while the best was bestowed on their guests. The Life of St. Frances of Rome, and Others
  • The sturdy roots dug deep into unyielding rocks and drew nourishment from the seemingly sterile soil.
  • It then becomes more firmly attached and receives nourishment from the fish by root-like processes.
  • Coke goes on to say estovers signify sustenance, aliment, or nourishment.
  • But this, though not arduous, had outgone his ambition, nature having gifted him with a remarkable power of extracting nourishment from food, which is now called assimilation. Springhaven
  • Consider how the fruit of the Spirit in its splendid variety provides nourishment for our souls.
  • One proposed explanation is that animal alcoholics are after the high calorie nourishment of ethanol.
  • The disconnected and dispossessed, like Mason, are left to take care of their body and not expect any ‘consumption’ beyond simple nourishment and promises.
  • Sugar gives quick relief to hunger but provides no lasting nourishment. The Hayfever Handbook - a summer survival guide
  • He gave me an amuse-gueule, a mini gazpacho, while I was in the kitchen, and a little orange jelly which was delicious, but those were Hunca Munca titbits, not serious nourishment.
  • Sugar gives quick relief to hunger but provides no lasting nourishment.
  • Nor yet will the sun shine upon the earth, nor the stars send down any good influence, because the terrestrial globe hath desisted from sending up their wonted nourishment by vapours and exhalations, wherewith Heraclitus said, the Stoics proved, Cicero maintained, they were cherished and alimented. Five books of the lives, heroic deeds and sayings of Gargantua and his son Pantagruel
  • It can result from incomplete digestion providing bacteria with extra nourishment. The Family Nutrition Workbook
  • Most of our joints are of the synovial variety - they are surrounded by a layer of tissue that produces a fluid, called synovial fluid, which lubricates the joints to reduce friction, help protect the joint surfaces and provide nourishment to cartilage (which has a very limited blood supply). CBS New York- News, Sports, Weather, Traffic and the Best of NY
  • Not surprisingly, malnourishment and illness like fevers, coughs, malaria, scabies and diarrhoea are common.
  • The esophagus is the part through which nourishment proceeds to the gut; so that animals without necks manifestly do not have an esophagus. Aristotle's Biology
  • A fortnight ago, they stopped the nourishment, deliberately.
  • a process which left it masticable indeed, but void of savour and nourishment. Victorian Short Stories of Troubled Marriages
  • Their little mouths flail about searching for nourishment, and their mothers are often ill-equipped to help them.
  • Rhasis and [1360] Magninus discommend all fish, and say, they breed viscosities, slimy nutriment, little and humorous nourishment. Anatomy of Melancholy
  • More than 90 percent are suffering long-term malnourishment and micronutrient deficiency. WN.com - Articles related to Thriving market: Zinn Park site attracts farmers, crafters for a third season
  • Now she takes you on a harrowing true life journey from childhood neglect so bad she gnawed at dog bones for nourishment.
  • Every animal in the food chain draws nourishment from other animals or plants.
  • As previously stated they are not eaten as they were created, but have been put through a prolonged milling process or other method of preparation which not only eliminates many elements of nourishment but also breaks up the food into the most minute particles, thus eliminating the rough, coarse and fibrous material in the food which ordinarily arouses what is known as the peristaltic activity of the bowels. Vitality Supreme
  • These seeds can be a great source of nourishment to birds in winter.
  • Much of the research, conducted on soldiers and workers in order to determine the minimum nourishment necessary to maintain health, emphasized models of efficiency.
  • Use it to tame dry hair or apply sparingly when wet for intense nourishment. Times, Sunday Times
  • Democracy is a plant that requires long nourishment and does not take root everywhere.

Report a problem

Please indicate a type of error

Additional information (optional):

This website uses cookies to make Linguix work for you. By using this site, you agree to our cookie policy