Lexicographical Neighbors of Cohobated
Literary usage of Cohobated
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. International Medical and Surgical Surveyby American Institute of Medicine by American Institute of Medicine (1922)
"In studying the cohobated oils of American and Japanese peppermints grown by the
... But he was surprised to find that 'the 1920 cohobated oil of Japanese ..."
2. Proceedings of the American Pharmaceutical Association at the Annual Meeting by American Pharmaceutical Association, National Pharmaceutical Convention, American Pharmaceutical Association Meeting (1905)
"... 7o per cent. alcohol, while the cohobated oil required only one and two third
parts of 8o per cent. and 6 parts of 7o per cent. alcohol for solution. ..."
3. The Chemical Works of Caspar Neumann ...: Abridged and Methodized : with by Caspar Neumann, William Lewis (1773)
"... liquor being cohobated on this mafs, and drawn off again, the dry remainder
appeared tinged through- Cut of a beautiful, deep ultramarine blue; ..."
4. Hand-book of Chemistry by Leopold Gmelin, Henry Watts (1855)
"The liquid, which fumed and was strongly acid, was cohobated for some time to
expel some of the free hydrochloric acid and theu distilled fractionally. ..."
5. Pharmacopoeia Universalis: Or, A New Universal English Dispensatory. Containing by Robert James (1747)
"The cohobated Water of Rue can never be ... to the cohobated Waters of fome
Vegetables ; and as he was too penetrating to deceive ..."
6. The Edinburgh New Dispensatory: With Additions of the Most Approved Formulæ by William Lewis, Antoine Laurent Lavoisier, John Rotherham (1801)
"... rue may be of in the two bft cafes, it undoubtedly has its ufe in others ;
the cohobated water, however, is not the moil efficacious preparation of it. ..."
7. Isis Unveiled: A Master-key to the Mysteries of Ancient and Modern Science by Helena Petrovna Blavatsky (1892)
"... "This salt, by being several times cohobated with Paracelsus, sal circulation,
loses all its fixedness, and at length becomes an insipid water, ..."
8. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London by Royal Society (Great Britain) (1881)
"The ether was also cohobated with sodium for four days, and boiled at 34°-4.
The pressure-apparatus resembled that used by Dr. Andrews in his experiments on ..."