10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «CAUSTICAL»
Discover the use of
caustical in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
caustical and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Journal of Communications Technology & Electronics
In the absence of the screen, the family of GO rays would form a caustical
singularity known as a caustical edge (A3). The structure of the wave field in the
vicinity of a caustical edge was investigated by T. Pearcey [47]. A uniform
asymptotic is ...
—James Camp, “The Contemptibles and the Tapeworms: Houellebecq and BHL
Correspond,” The Millions, 2011. caustical. (KOS-ti-kel) adjective. causticity. (kos-
TIS-i-tee) noun chapfallen (or chopfallen) (CHAP-fal-len) adjective dejected or ...
Robert Hartwell Fiske, 2011
3
A Critical Pronouncing Dictionary and Expositor of the ...
CAUSTICAL, kaws'té-kál, lo. Be longing CAUSTICK, kàws'tîk, J to medicaments
which, by their violent activity and heat, destroy the texture of the part to which
they are applied, and burn it into an eschar. CAUSTICK, kàws'tîk, ». A caustick or
...
4
The Philosophical Transactions and Collections: Abridged and ...
I have two things more to observe, That seven Years before this Operation, this
Tumour was near as big, and subsided of it self : And that when I began with
Caustical Medicines, the first I us'd was Precis. Rub. with which I cover'd the
whole ...
Royal society of London, 1721
5
A treatise of diseases in general: wherein the true causes, ...
That the morbid Humours, which cause and subtend scro- phulous Diseases, are
more angular, or acute and penetrating, on the one hand ; and those which
produce and support the Scirrhous, are more hot, adust, and caustical, ort the
other ...
Charles Perry, T. Woodward ((Londres)), C. Davis ((Londres)), 1741
6
The Philosophical Transactions ... Abridged ...
... and Radix of the Cystis away by Caustical Medicines, which I applied without
Success, they coming off without making any Efcar, the Radix being of a
cartilaginous Substance : searching with my Probe to find some Interstice, it dropt
into one ...
Royal Society (Great Britain), John Lowthorp, Henry Jones, 1749
7
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London
iding to take the reit of the Sarcoma, and Radix of the > away by Caustical
Medicines, which Iapplyed with- success, they coming off without making an
Eschar, Radix being cf a Cartilagenous substance : searching, i my Probe to find
some ...
8
Encyclopaedia Perthensis; Or Universal Dictionary of the ...
Caustical. adj. t«»»r««*.] Epithets of medicaments which destroy the texture of the
part to which they are applied, and eat it away, or bum it into an eschar, which
they do by extreme minuteness, asperity, and quantity 'of motion, that, like those ...
9
Philosophical Transactions, Giving Some Accompt of the ...
... when the Principles are complicated by a certain colUquationj thence by our
Author called Ignes colliqua- tivi, and by him distinguish'! in Caustical,Corrofive,
and Putrefactive. The first again into Lixivial (as the fixt Alcalies of Plants, fixt Nitre
, ...
John Martyn ((Londres)), James Allestry ((Londres)), Henry Oldenburg, 1677
10
Royal Dictionary English and French and French and English
CAUS'I'ICAL (kid-tidtal), or CAUSTIC (had-tilt), adj. [burning; corrosive] caustic,
corrosif, lbru'lant, caute're'tique. ] Caustical or caustic medecme, reméde
causnque. Causnc curve [in Geom.], caustique, f. CAUSTKC [satiricah biting],
CfltLSllqllE.