¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Densifying
1. densify [v] - See also: densify
Lexicographical Neighbors of Densifying
Literary usage of Densifying
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Buffalo Medical Journal (1903)
"The densifying remedies condense the humor which they encounter by hardening and
densifying it. The contractiva contract the member and render it dense. ..."
2. The Scientific Basis of Education Demonstrated: By an Analysis of the by John Hecker (1867)
"... by its peculiar densifying and secreting process; and this equalizing influence
serves as a counterpoise to the heat resulting from the circulation of ..."
3. The Philosophy of Physics: Or, Process of Creative Development by which the by Andrew Brown (1854)
"... and we must likewise be aware that this enveloping medium being so vastly deep
and progressively densifying downward, that it would take the pulsar ..."
4. Reports of Proceedings by Associations of gas engineers and managers, United Kingdom (1896)
"... as in the case of hydrocarbons like acetylene, or still further by densifying
such hydrocarbons by polymerization, or even by mechanical condensation or ..."
5. The Ante-Nicene Fathers: Translations of the Writings of the Fathers Down to by Alexander Roberts, James Donaldson, Arthur Cleveland Coxe, Ernest Cushing Richardson, Allan Menzies, Bernhard Pick (1903)
"Hence, by this densifying process, there arose a fixing of the soul's corporeity;
and by the impression its figure was formed and moulded. ..."
6. Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society Held at Philadelphia for by American Philosophical Society (1906)
"Freezing must apparently have been a trivial factor, if not quite absent, and
low temperature was robbed of its chief densifying effects. ..."
7. Ante-Nicene Christian Library: Translations of the Writings of the Fathers by James Donaldson, Alexander Roberts, Novatianus, Allan Menzies (1870)
"Hence, by this densifying process, there arose a fixing of the soul's corporeity;
and by the impression its figure was formed and moulded. ..."