Lexicographical Neighbors of Flocculations
Literary usage of Flocculations
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The American Journal of Syphilis (1921)
"... that from his studies of the complement with flocculations resulting in positive
serums, IX gave nothing else than an antigen complex characteristic for ..."
2. Science by American Association for the Advancement of Science (1904)
"Such reagents have no action on inert crystalline particles, but they do upon
colloids, producing various effects, such as coagulations, flocculations and ..."
3. Infection and Resistance: An Exposition of the Biological Phenomena by Hans Zinsser (1918)
"... the agglutination reaction is governed by many of the laws which obtain in
colloidal flocculations. This, however, does not exclude the possibility that ..."
4. Principles and Practice of Agricultural Analysis: A Manual for the Study of by Harvey Washington Wiley (1906)
"... a very marked effect in breaking up the flocculations of the clay particles,
and in increasing the quantity of the group approximately .005 millimeter, ..."
5. The Plant World by Plant World Association, Wild Flower Preservation Society (U.S.) (1911)
"This effect is probably produced through an influence on the forces at the
solid-liquid surface and the flocculations to which they give rise. ..."
6. The Plant World by Plant World Association, Wild Flower Preservation Society (U.S.) (1911)
"This effect is probably produced through an influence on the forces at the
solid-liquid surface and the flocculations to which they give rise. ..."
7. Colloids in Biology and Medicine by Heinrich Bechhold (1919)
"... colloid processes explains how artificially produced flocculations, coagulations
and striations (after treatment with silver nitrate and potassium ..."
8. Transactions of the American Ceramic Society Containing the Papers and by American Ceramic Society (1909)
"2. The long time required for the analysis. 3. The troublesome manipulation to
break up flocculations. 4. The rather fragile apparatus. ..."