¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Injecting
1. inject [v] - See also: inject
Lexicographical Neighbors of Injecting
Literary usage of Injecting
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The American Naturalist by American Society of Naturalists, Essex Institute (1878)
"PLASTER OF PARIS AS AN Injecting MASS.1 BY SIMON H. GAGE, BS THE necessity for
some artificial, colored medium to fill the blood vessels must have been felt ..."
2. How to Work with the Microscope by Lionel Smith Beale (1880)
"purposes, although mercury was formerly much employed for injecting lymphatic
vessels and ... The mercurial injecting apparatus consists of a glass tube, ..."
3. The Journal of Experimental Medicine by Rockefeller University, Rockefeller Institute, Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research (1906)
"... for injecting precise amounts of fluids into animals is excellent. In the
practical application of this method certain difficulties have however been ..."
4. The Microscope in Its Application to Practical Medicine by Lionel Smith Beale (1858)
"Prussian Blue Injecting Fluid. — In searching for a fluid possessing all these
... It is well adapted for injecting morbid growths, and possesses many ..."
5. The Anatomical Instructor: Or, An Illustration of the Modern and Most by Thomas Pole (1813)
"Injecting the Blood Vessels with Coloured Fluids. J. HE Arteries having no valves,
excepting where they make their exit from Ihv heart, are very favourable ..."
6. The Retrospect of Practical Medicine and Surgery: Being a Half-yearly edited by William Braithwaite, James Braithwaite, Edmond Fauriel Trevelyan (1862)
"Another simple form of injecting apparatus, on the same principle, consisted of
the usual tin ... He had used it for injecting both the rectum and vagina. ..."
7. The Microscope and Microscopical Technology: A Textbook for Physicians and by Heinrich Frey (1872)
"The art of injecting can only be learned, and its execution is by no means easy.
Much, indeed the greater part, depends on apparently unimportant expedients ..."