Lexicographical Neighbors of Evulsions
Literary usage of Evulsions
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.) (1866)
"The opening of felons and other abscesses, the removal of small tumours, small
incisions, excisions, and evulsions, and perhaps the extraction of teeth, ..."
2. The Microscope: Its History, Construction, and Applications: Being a by Jabez Hogg (1887)
"The protrusions of these lobes are evidently evulsions of the skin, ordinarily
concealed in two lateral cavities. They may be protruded by pressure, ..."
3. General Surgical Pathology and Therapeutics, in Fifty Lectures: A Textbook by Theodor Billroth (1890)
"After evulsions or crushed wounds especially, the bones may protrude and the
stump may require a regular amputation. The results of frost-bite must be ..."
4. Petralogy. A Treatise on Rocks by John Pinkerton (1811)
"... caliginous part above, throughout its whole extent, was illuminated by flashes
of fire, electrical aigrettes, and evulsions of ignited stones; ..."
5. The Illustrated Magazine of Art (1854)
"... was just at that ime entering upon one of the most disastrous commercial •evulsions
it ever experienced. ..."
6. Annual of the Universal Medical Sciencesedited by [Anonymus AC02809657] edited by [Anonymus AC02809657] (1894)
"Deaver J$gu operated on a patient who had recurrence of pain after two evulsions
of the inferior dental nerve. The whole field of operation was opened up ..."
7. The British Journal of Homoeopathy edited by John James Drysdale, Robert Ellis Dudgeon, Richard Hughes, John Rutherfurd Russell (1866)
"The opening of felons and other abscesses; the removal of small tumours; small
incisions, excisions and evulsions, and perhaps the extraction of teeth, ..."