¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Agglutinations
1. agglutination [n] - See also: agglutination
Lexicographical Neighbors of Agglutinations
Literary usage of Agglutinations
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Journal of Experimental Medicine by Rockefeller University, Rockefeller Institute, Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research (1900)
"While carrying out some studies upon agglutinations by the usual method of ...
The extent and the other characters of such agglutinations will be dealt with ..."
2. Collected Reprints, 1896-1915 by Frank Rattray Lillie (1896)
"The agglutinations are substantially permanent in Nereis; the spermatozoa stick
together much more firmly. In what follows we may leave the activation and ..."
3. A Text-book Upon the Pathogenic Bacteria: For Students of Medicine and by Joseph McFarland (1903)
"The formation of agglutinations probably does not always indicate important
cellular or vital reactions, as they sometimes follow the addition of chemic ..."
4. The Journal of Infectious Diseases by Infectious Diseases Society of America, John Rockefeller McCormick Memorial Fund, John McCormick Institute for Infectious Diseases (1915)
"Even if the non-specific agglutinations (agglutinations in a dilution of 1:20)
are included, a correlation of only 50 percent is obtained with two of the ..."
5. The American Journal of the Medical Sciences by Southern Society for Clinical Investigation (U.S.) (1902)
"Furthermore, due to complex conditions of development of this part of the body,
these abnormal agglutinations can and often do occur, and " portions of the ..."
6. The Journal of Medical Research by American Association of Pathologists and Bacteriologists (1907)
"A peculiar feature of these agglutinations with normal rabbit serum is the fact that
... The "homologous" agglutinations run diagonally across the table. ..."
7. The Etiology and Pathology of Typhus: Being the Main Report of the Typhus by Simeon Burt Wolbach, John Launcelot. Todd, Francis Winslow Palfrey (1922)
"But in most cases of positive agglutinations with the typhoid bacillus no clinical
... It is probable that these agglutinations were due to the peculiar ..."