CĂRȚI ÎN ENGLEZĂ ÎN LEGĂTURĂ CU «SAPROGENOUS»
Descoperă întrebuințarea
saprogenous în următoarea selecție bibliografică. Cărți în legătură cu
saprogenous și extrase din aceasta pentru a furniza contextul de întrebuințare al acestuia în literatura Engleză.
Diphtheria ( ? also Zoogenous and Saprogenous). Inhaled and Inoculated —
Small-pox. Inoculated — Syphilis. Anthropogenous and Zoogenous• Inhaled,
Ingested, and Inoculated — Tuberculosis ( ? also Saprogenous).
Anthropogenous and ...
Frederick Joseph Sykes, 1892
IV (/3) Cells in Filaments J Zymogenous . = V ( Saprogenous . . . = VI /
Pathogenous . . . = VII (y) Cells = Spirilla J Zymogenous . . . = VIII I Saprogenous .
. . = IX ( Pathogenous . = X (i) Cells of other forms < Zymogenous . . . = XI \
Saprogenous .
Sir Isaac Bayley Balfour, Roland Thaxter, Vernon Herbert Blackman, 1892
... Zymogenous I Saprogenous / Pathogenous (/9) Cells in Filaments J
Zymogenous ( Saprogenous / Pathogenous (7) Cells = Spirilla ) Zymogenous (
Saprogenous 1 Pathogenous (8) Cells of other forms < Zymogenous V
Saprogenous TRIBE ...
Harry Marshall Ward, 1902
4
American encyclopedic dictionary
saprogenous. S&-pr8& -en-ofia, adj. [Gr. sapro*=putrid, and root of qennao=tn
engender.] Produced by or in connection with putridity. " Saprogenous fungi are
the cause of the phenomenon of fermentation." —Thome" : Hot. (ed. Bennett), p.
Robert Hunter, John Alfred Williams, Sidney John Hervon Herrtage, 1897
5
The imperial encyclopaedic dictionary: a new and exhaustive ...
"Saprogenous fungi are the cause of the phenomenon of fermentation." —
Thome: Hot. ved. Bennett;, p. 276. sap r6 leg -nl-a. s. [Greek eapros = putrid, and
leonon^tbe colored border of a garment.] But.: A synonym of Leptomitus, or tho
genus ...
6
The international encyclopedia of surgery: a systematic ...
These three bacteria of putrefaction, isolated from putrid substances, always
produced putrid decomposition, while the filtrate without the bacterium had no
decomposing (saprogenous) effects. Experiments upon the pathogenous
qualities of ...
7
Annual of the Universal Medical Sciences
coccus or staphylococcus of extraordinary virulence, capableof causing necrosis
of the tissue, being associated with a saprogenous microbe, sometimes
analogous to the coli bacillus and sometimes constituting a distinct species. He
also met ...
Charles Eucharist de Medicis Sajous, 1896
In one kind all the organs contained a special non-saprogenous bacterium of a
highly pathogenic type ; in another the bacilli were less pathogenic and
saprogenous ; and, lastly, there was septicaemia produced by pus bacteria of
exceptional ...
Charles Barrett Lockwood, 1896
9
Surgical diseases of the chest
But inoculation experiments show the presence of tuberculosis beyond doubt. In
109 cases of pyothorax Netter found the streptococcus 51 times; the
pneumococcus, 32 times; the bacillus tuberculosis, 12 times, and saprogenous
organisms, ...
10
The Bacteriological World: A Monthly Illustrated Magazine ...
Duclaux found that sterilized earth is improper for germination. , Saprogenous
and chromogenous bacteria. — Among the putrefactive microbes, there are some
whose growth is associated with nauseous or aromatic agreeable odors.