¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Filtrates
1. filtrate [v] - See also: filtrate
Lexicographical Neighbors of Filtrates
Literary usage of Filtrates
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The American Journal of the Medical Sciences by Southern Society for Clinical Investigation (U.S.) (1908)
"The Treatment of Enteric Fever with Specific Sera Filtrates and Residues.
—RICHARDSON (Boston Med. and Surg. Jour., 1907, clvii, 449) summarizes a study of ..."
2. Infection and Resistance: An Exposition of the Biological Phenomena by Hans Zinsser (1918)
"He was working with broth filtrates of Bacillus pestis and of the cholera spirillum,
and found that when he mixed the perfectly clear filtrates of such ..."
3. The Chemical News and Journal of Industrial Science (1902)
"... in which 5 grms. of new nitrate had been employed, and it will be seen that
there ii no difference in the activity of the filtrates in the two cates. ..."
4. The Areas of the United States, the States, and the Territories by Henry Gannett (1906)
"A. IN THE Filtrates FROM 33. B (p. 179). The filtrates containing the calcium,
magnesium, and manganese are caught in a flask of about 150 cm.3 capacity, ..."
5. Synthetic Inorganic Chemistry: A Course of Laboratory and Classroom Study by Arthur Alphonzo Blanchard (1910)
"(e) Cloudy filtrates. — When a filtrate at first comes through cloudy, it is
usually sufficient to pour the first portion through the filter a second time. ..."
6. Journal of the American Chemical Society by American Chemical Society (1914)
"able amounts of acid from triacetin, as was the case with the plain broth filtrates.
It will be seen from Table VIII that the filtrates of those bacteria ..."
7. Proceedings of the American Pharmaceutical Association at the Annual Meeting by American Pharmaceutical Association, National Pharmaceutical Convention, American Pharmaceutical Association Meeting (1879)
"Again, titrating ammoniacal filtrates from opium, Dragendorff reports that when
additions showing 19 per cent, and 21 per cent. of morphia had been made, ..."