Lexicographical Neighbors of Corrosions
Literary usage of Corrosions
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Text-book of the Diseases of the Small Domestic Animals by Oscar Victor Brumley (1921)
"Corrosions AND BURNS OF THE CONJUNCTIVA. These occur rather commonly in dogs and
cats the result of accident or intent. They may also be due to the use of ..."
2. The Microtomist's Vade-mecum: A Handbook of the Methods of Microscopic Anatomy by Arthur Bolles Lee (1885)
"MACERATIONS AND Corrosions. 446. It is sometimes necessary, in order to obtain
a complete knowledge of the forms of the elements of a tissue, ..."
3. A Series of Letters from London Written During the Years 1856, '57, '58, '59 by George Mifflin Dallas, Julia Dallas (1869)
"can it, in reason, be expected to last amid the lashings, grindings, abrasions,
and corrosions of onr stormy sea? Always faithfully yrs. No. 218.-TO ME. ..."
4. Diseases of the eye and disorders of speech in childhood by Oskar Everbusch, Max Nadoleczny (1914)
"BURNS AND Corrosions OF THE CONJUNCTIVA AND CORNEA Burns caused by molten ...
The changes caused by burns from molten metal and corrosions by lune, etc., ..."
5. Narratives from Criminal Trials in Scotland by John Hill Burton (1852)
"It was speckled with the corrosions of the acid which the poor man had instantaneously
spurted out ere she had ceased bending over him. ..."
6. Das Mikroskop und Seine Anwendung by Leopold Dippel, Adolph Lomb Optical Collection (1882)
"... Salzes zu vermeiden, die Maceration in geschlossenem Gefässe vorgenommen werden
mues. Corrosions- und ..."
7. Diseases of the digestive organs: With Special Reference to Their Diagnosis by Charles Dettie Aaron (1921)
"BURNS AND Corrosions OF THE ESOPHAGUS. Burns of the esophagus may occur through
steam or hot liquids or solids. Esophageal burns due to steam are caused ..."
8. The Encyclopedia Americanaedited by Frederick Converse Beach, George Edwin Rines edited by Frederick Converse Beach, George Edwin Rines (1903)
"got from parts which have been bitten or corroded in an almost imperceptible
degree — the deeper corrosions giving the lightest shade. ..."