Lexicographical Neighbors of Heavinesses
Literary usage of Heavinesses
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Mechanics of Engineering: Comprising Statics and Kinetics of Solids; the by Irving Porter Church (1908)
"Let their heavinesses be yt and y\ respectively. The pressure at e may be written (§
413) either or P» =?<>, + h* according as we refer it to the water ..."
2. Mechanics of Engineering: Comprising Statics and Dynamics of Solids; the by Irving Porter Church (1893)
"(3) ie, the heights of the free surfaces of the two liquids above tho surface of
contact are inversely proportional to their respective heavinesses. ..."
3. Mechanics of Engineering (Fluids): A Treatise on Hydraulics and Pneumatics by Irving Porter Church (1889)
"Let their heavinesses be yt and y, respectively. The pressure at e may be written (§
413) either or according as we refer it to the water column or the ..."
4. Mechanics of Engineering (Fluids): A Treatise on Hydraulics and Pneumatics by Irving Porter Church (1889)
"Let their heavinesses be yl and y, respectively. The pressure at e ^., may be
written (§ 413) either or (2) according as we refer it to the water column or ..."
5. The Harvard Classics by Charles William Eliot (1910)
"... to weigh them with brass weights is to compare their gravitations towards the
earth—to compare the heavinesses of the different bodies. ..."
6. The Popular Science Monthly (1887)
"Now, to do away with the last vestige of impracticable mechanism, in which the
heavinesses of all parts of each long rod are supported ..."