¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Burettes
1. burette [n] - See also: burette
Lexicographical Neighbors of Burettes
Literary usage of Burettes
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Practical Physiological Chemistry by Sydney William Cole (1920)
"burettes. The chief precautions to be taken are to allow time for proper drainage,
... The author prefers to use burettes that have the marks engraved as ..."
2. A Comparison of Methods for Determining the Respiratory Exchange of Man by Thorne Martin Carpenter (1915)
"On the inside of these burettes are two additional burettes, 3 and 3, ...
The connections between the pipettes and burettes are made by means of capillary ..."
3. Proceedings of the American Pharmaceutical Association at the Annual Meeting by American Pharmaceutical Association, National Pharmaceutical Convention, American Pharmaceutical Association Meeting (1883)
"burettes—Attachment for Filling, etc.—Mr. Fr. O. Roeder having had trouble in
procuring burettes with glass stopcocks which would not leak when freed from ..."
4. Standard Methods of Chemical Analysis: A Manual of Analytical Methods and by Wilfred Welday Scott (1917)
"GAS burettes Here may be mentioned the Hempel gas burette, made for accurate ...
121, use bulbed burettes to shorten them, connected with leveling bottles. ..."
5. Chemical Handicraft: A Classified and Descriptive Catalogue of Chemical by John Joseph Griffin (1877)
"The branch b serves to support the burettes, a to keep them upright, ...
The burettes being supported by the middle bar b, can be fixed at any required ..."
6. Analytical Chemistry by Frederick Pearson Treadwell (1910)
"Calibration of burettes. In volumetric titrations it is advisable to begin each
... It is proper, therefore, to calibrate burettes in the same way. ..."
7. Practical Physical Chemistry by Alexander Findlay (1920)
"Calibration of burettes.—burettes are most simply calibrated by the Ostwald method
with the help of a small pipette (generally 2 cc), the volume of which ..."