Lexicographical Neighbors of Cacodyls
Literary usage of Cacodyls
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The American Journal of Psychology by Granville Stanley Hall, Edward Bradford Titchener (1922)
"For the P-corner there was the choice of carbon disulphide, hydrogen sulphide,
the mercaptans, the cacodyls, ..."
2. A Dictionary of Chemistry and the Allied Branches of Other Sciences by Henry Watts (1871)
"Compounds belonging to the second of the above forms are produced by the direct
combination of the cacodyls with negative elements. ..."
3. Organic Compounds of Arsenic & Antimony by Gilbert Thomas Morgan (1918)
"The discovery of secondary aliphatic arsines has now furnished a synthetic method
for producing simple and mixed cacodyls. For instance, dimethyl- arsine ..."
4. The Second Step in Chemistry: Or The Student's Guide to the Higher Branches by Robert Galloway (1864)
"... by the direct combination of the cacodyls with negative elements; the oxides
are bases of comparatively feeble power, slowly combining with two ..."