Lexicographical Neighbors of Trophically
Literary usage of Trophically
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Medical and Surgical Reporter (1893)
"... probably the immediate cause of death; anthracosis, or miner's lung, with
cavities; an enlarged hyper- trophically cirrhotic liver ; an enlarged spleen ..."
2. The Processes of History by Frederick John Teggart (1918)
"... the outbreak of passions long repressed by fixed custom, but starting into
life as soon as that repression had been catas- trophically removed. ..."
3. The Processes of History by Frederick John Teggart (1918)
"... the outbreak of passions long repressed by fixed custom, but starting into
life as soon as that repression had been catas- trophically removed. ..."
4. Brain and Spinal Cord: A Manual for the Study of the Morphology and Fibre by Emil Villiger (1918)
"... as the elements of the nervous system, which anatomically, trophically and as
regards specific function, enjoy a certain degree of independence. ..."
5. America and the New Epoch by Charles Proteus Steinmetz (1916)
"A small change in the vote, therefore, shifts majority to minority, and catas-
trophically reverses all governmental policies, as the result of an ..."
6. A Text-book of the Principles of Animal Histology by Ulric Dahlgren, William Allison Kepner (1908)
"It is very doubtful if this muscle cell supports any but its own fibrils trophically,
or even furnishes them a nervous stimulus, although this latter case ..."