Lexicographical Neighbors of Encapsuling
Literary usage of Encapsuling
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Practitioner by Gale Group, ProQuest Information and Learning Company (1888)
"process of encapsuling and consequent isolation.1 This process begins, ...
But it must not be forgotten that the encapsuling may also only begin as a ..."
2. Experimental Morphology by Charles Benedict Davenport (1899)
"There is a doubt, however, whether this encapsuling is a phenomenon common to
all organisms which can resist desiccating influences, and, therefore, ..."
3. The Sanitarian by Medico-Legal Society of New York (1889)
"In the case of local septic processes, I should, on the other hand, admit that
many micro-organisms maybe destroyed indirectly by the process of encapsuling ..."
4. A Manual of pathology by Joseph Coats (1903)
"The embolus, acting as a foreign body, will usually induce thrombosis on its
surface, so that it may get covered in by an encapsuling thrombus. ..."
5. A Text-book of materia medica, therapeutics and pharmacology by George Frank Butler (1908)
"encapsuling powders by filling them in gelatin capsules is a very convenient and
elegant form of administration. No mixture which is desired to be given in ..."
6. Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease by Philadelphia Neurological Society, American Neurological Association, Chicago Neurological Society, New York Neurological Association (1893)
"This capsule extends beyond the extreme limit of the inferior pole, and high up
upon the protoplasmic arms of the cells. The encapsuling of the Purkinje ..."