¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Acridines
1. acridine [n] - See also: acridine
Lexicographical Neighbors of Acridines
Literary usage of Acridines
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Victor Von Richter's Organic Chemistry; Or, Chemistry of the Carbon by Victor von Richter, Richard Anschütz, Georg Schroeter (1900)
"acridines may be synthesized : i. From diphenylamine and acids, ... Homologous
acridines are similarly obtained from diphenylamine and the higher fatty ..."
2. Chemistry of the Carbon Compounds: Or, Organic Chemistry by Victor von Richter (1891)
"+ H,O. Homologous acridines are similarly obtained from diphenylamine and ...
The acridines are feeble bases ; their salts are decomposed by boiling water. ..."
3. The Chemical News and Journal of Industrial Science (1908)
"... 1387; 1907, xci., 1233, 1240; 1908, xciii., 63) to the synthesis of acridines
derived from phenanthrene and the closely-allied fluorene. ..."
4. International Catalogue of Scientific Literature by Royal Society (Great Britain). (1906)
"... of the acridines and naphth- acridines. London, J. Ohem. Soc., 85,
1904, (1106-1206); [abstract] London, Proc. Chem. Soc., 20, 1004, (176). [1930]. ..."
5. The Year-book for Colorists and Dyers: Presenting a Review of the Year's by Herman A Metz (1903)
"Benzyl derivatives of acridines have hitherto not been known. The inventor found
that acridines in alpha position—that is to say, those benzylated at the ..."