CO OZNACZA SŁOWO WAX INSECT
Definicja słowa wax insect w słowniku
Definicja owadów woskowych w słowniku to dowolne z różnych owadów, które wydzielają wosk lub woskowatą substancję, zwłaszcza orientalne gatunki Ceroplastes ceriferus, które produkują chiński wosk.
KSIĄŻKI POWIĄZANE ZE SŁOWEM «WAX INSECT»
Poznaj użycie słowa
wax insect w następujących pozycjach bibliograficznych Książki powiązane ze słowem
wax insect oraz krótkie ich fragmenty w celu przedstawienia kontekstu użycia w literaturze.
1
Contributions Towards the Materia Medica and Natural History ...
Honey-comb (jfe^; ^) was formerly officinal. WAX-TBEES, — -pg (Tung-ts'ing). —
This is a descriptive and comprehensive term applied to certain evergreen
Oleaceous trees which harbour the wax-insect. The tree commonly known by this
...
THE WHITE WAX INSECT OF CHINA. {Cicada Umbata.) The production of
substances bearing resemblance more or less to the nature of wax or tallow is
attended with some remarkable circumstances, arising from the great differences
in the ...
3
Journal of the Proceedings of the Linnean Society: Zoology
the trees upon which the wax-insect lives are of two or three species. Of one of
these, resembling an ash, a dried specimen was on the table. Mr. Lockhart has in
his garden at Shanghai a small wax-tree of this species which he hopes shortly to
...
4
Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society
Mr. Lockhart has in his garden at Shanghai a small wax-tree of this species which
he hopes shortly to colonize with the wax-insect. The tree has not yet flowered,
and its botanical position is as yet undetermined. A living plant of the same ...
Linnean Society of London,
1857
5
The Journal of the Linnean Society of London
Mr. Lockhart has in his garden at Shanghai a small wax-tree of this species which
he hopes shortly to colonize with the wax-insect. The tree has not yet flowered,
and its botanical position is as yet undetermined. A living plant of the same ...
Linnean Society (London),
1857
6
Pharmaceutical Journal;: A Weekly Record of Pharmacy and ...
Respecting the tree or trees upon which the wax-insect feeds (for like the Coccus
laccu there may be several trees that support it) it is evident that our information is
as yet extremely defective. Mr. Fortune entertains great doubts whether the ...
7
Pharmaceutical Journal and Transactions
Respecting the tree or trees upon which the wax-insect feeds (for like the Coccus
lacca there may be several trees that support it) it is evident that our information is
as yet extremely defective. Mr. Fortune entertains great doubts whether the ...
8
The Journal of the Linnean Society: Zoology
the trees upon which the wax-insect lives are of two or three species. Of one of
these, resembling an ash, a dried specimen was on the table. Mr. Lockhart has in
his garden at Shanghai a small wax-tree of this species which he hopes shortly to
...
9
Food in China: A Cultural and Historical Inquiry
... times (A.D. 1271-1368). It was known to Europeans in China at least by the
seventeenth century and came to be exported to Europe, being known in
England as "Chinese wax," "Chinese insect wax," "insect white wax," and by
other names.
Frederick J. Simoons,
1990
10
Notes and Queries on China and Japan
This term is also interchanged with -Jjr J=| Nu-ching, more properly connected
with the wax-insect, and identical with the Ligustrum japonicum and L.
obtusifolinm, as B. remarks. This same term is applied to Rhus succedaneum,
whose ripe ...