Lexicographical Neighbors of Eructated
Literary usage of Eructated
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Manual of the practice of medicine by George Roe Lockwood (1901)
"There may be an odor to the eructated gas of food eaten some time previous; this
symptom is not only very suggestive of atony, but gives in addition a very ..."
2. Functional & Organic Diseases of the Stomach by Sidney Martin (1895)
"ERUCTATIONS AND VOMITING. indeed that the gas eructated from the stomach may le
from the intestines, regurgitating through the pylorus, is undoubtedly the ..."
3. The American Journal of the Medical Sciences by Southern Society for Clinical Investigation (U.S.) (1851)
"Solid food would be taken eagerly, swallowed, and almost immediately eructated.
At one period of the twenty-four hours, sometimes in the morning, ..."
4. The Medical and Surgical Reporter (1896)
"... where human beings must point—of spitting, is the deposition of live and
congregate. mucus, eructated matter, tobacco juice, We have used the word spit, ..."
5. The New York Journal of Medicine by Samuel Smith Purple, Charles Alfred Lee, Henry Daggett Bulkley, Samuel Forry, Stephen Smith (1856)
"Continue creosote—substitute brandy and water for the champagne. Saturday, Sept.
1,2 AM—Continues to sink; fluid eructated emits a ..."
6. Medico-Chirurgical Transactions by Royal Medical and Chirurgical Society of London (1849)
"With the hiccup a dark-red coloured fluid has been eructated containing
blood-corpuscles and (according to the clinical clerk) pus; tongue red at tip and ..."