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Definition of Cubic millimetre
1. Noun. A metric measure of volume or capacity equal to a cube 1 millimeter on each edge.
Generic synonyms: Metric Capacity Unit
Group relationships: Cc, Cubic Centimeter, Cubic Centimetre, Mil, Milliliter, Millilitre, Ml
Lexicographical Neighbors of Cubic Millimetre
Literary usage of Cubic millimetre
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The American Journal of the Medical Sciences by Southern Society for Clinical Investigation (U.S.) (1902)
"In only 7 of the cases were the red blood corpuscles below 2500000 per cubic
millimetre. In 22 cases the hemoglobin percentage was relatively low, ..."
2. Medical Record by George Frederick Shrady, Thomas Lathrop Stedman (1896)
"Examination of blood showed eight per cent, of haemoglobin and 3900000 corpuscles
to a cubic millimetre. After thirty-four days taking the preparation the ..."
3. A Manual of Physiology: With Practical Exercises by George Neil Stewart (1918)
"In persons suffering from profound anaemia the number may sink to 1000000 per
cubic millimetre, or even less. In one case of pernicious anaemia, ..."
4. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London by Royal Society (Great Britain) (1894)
"No. 1. Control Experiment.—Rabbit, weight 2 kilos. The blood from an ear-vein
was found to contain 6500 leucocytes per cubic millimetre—0 per cent, ..."
5. Physiological Chemistry by Karl Gotthelf Lehmann, George Edward Day (1854)
"... his various countings that in 1 cubic millimetre [the linear millimetre being
about l-25th of an inch] of normal blood obtained by pricking tlie finger, ..."
6. Medical Diagnosis, with Special Reference to Practical Medicine: A Guide to by Jacob Mendes Da Costa (1884)
"In health one cubic millimetre of blood contains about five millions of corpuscles.
Malassez, in describing his new Globule-Counter, criticises the ..."
7. Proceedings of the Royal Society of Edinburgh by Royal Society of Edinburgh (1904)
"between 80 and 100 per cent., while the number of red corpuscles fluctuated
between 8000000 and 8800000 per cubic millimetre, and thi' number of white ..."