10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «FERULACEOUS»
Discover the use of
ferulaceous in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
ferulaceous and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
The Natural History of Pliny
The stalk of it is ferulaceous 10 and thin, and is sought by the inhabitants of those
countries as an article of food. It is employed also for making unguents, being
boiled up with the other ingredients, whatever they may happen to be. In leaf it ...
2
A Medicinal Dispensatory: Containing the Whole Body of ...
T zOO of" hedges-ous calefanmy. Book I?Sefeli Masfllimse. ' Vfjrbiafflcum 1 mtex.
lA-Zthiop, Herba. J'elopoxmse. useful in medicine, hath a ferulaceous caul, of two
Cubits heighth, geniculatedJandhardz its leases like . Fennel, but more ample, ...
3
A Course of Lectures, upon the materia medica, antient and ...
This, as well as most of those that arc called ferulaceous Gums, dissolve in
Vinegar ; we may strain them through Linnert Cloths, to purify them, and then
evaporate them till they come to the Consistence of Honey. The The Gum
Ammoniac is ...
4
A Dispensatory, Or Commentary on the Pharmacopoeias of Great ...
Fren. Sagapenum — Ital. Sagapeno ; Serapino.— Span, and J'ort. Sagepeno —
Ger. and Dan. Sagapen-gummi. THE Sa/acrjjvov of Dioscorides, a gum-resin "
from a ferulaceous plant growing in Media," is in all probability the modern 3 814
...
Sir Robert Christison, 1842
5
The elements of materia medica and therapeutics
Pentandria Digynia . (Gummi-resina, L.) History. — Sagapenum (o-txyxnrivov) is
mentioned both by Hippocrates1 and Dioscorides.* Pliny3 calls it Sacopenium.
Dioscorides says it is a liquor obtained from a ferulaceous plant growing in Media
.
6
The Works of Saint-Pierre: Comprising His Studies of Nature; ...
... ferulaceous plants of our climates, which attain the elevation of a little tree. On
the other hand there are ligneous shrubs, whicn do not exceed herbs in size, but
they grow, in general, in rugged and steep places, and afford to man the facility ...
Bernardin de Saint-Pierre, 1846
7
Dr. Boerhaave's Academical Lectures on the Theory of Physic: ...
... Figs, the Yolks of Eggs, and the sharp, aromatic or ferulaceous Gums,
Ammoniacum, Galbanum, Opþopanax, Sagapen, fresh Butter, &it. which may be
vari> oufly compounded into the Cataplasms,- Ointments and Plasters above-
mentioned.
8
A Complete History of Drugs. Written in French by Monsieur ...
... and aperiritivc. The Dose is from twenty Grains to a Dram. 25. Of. Gum.
Opopanax. O P OP/INAXis a Gum that flows, according to some Authors, from
Pame'. a ferulaceous Plant, call'd Panax Hemclrum, cr Hercules': sill-heal. It is
brought ...
Pierre Pomet, Nicolas Lémery, Joseph Pitton : de Tournefort, 1748
9
The Critical Review, Or, Annals of Literature
... drawn from a ferulaceous plant of the thapsia kind, common in Media; and that
he had found the small nardus indica, a graminous plant, some of which species
bear spicaceous flowers, both male and female, and others only semale flowers ...
10
The Edinburgh Medical and Surgical Journal ...
The manner of collecting it is very interestingly described by Dioscorides,§ who
says that the euphorbia is a ferulaceous tree growing in Lybia and Mauritania, full
of a most acrid juice, which the timid inhabitants collect (on account of its great ...