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Definition of Glycerole
1. Noun. A medicine made by mixing a substance in glycerin.
Definition of Glycerole
1. n. Same as Glycerite.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Glycerole
Literary usage of Glycerole
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 (1878)
"Treatment of Chronic Eczema by glycerole of Sub- acetate of Lead.—Dr. Squire advocates
the mixture of the preparation with vaseline, six parts of the former ..."
2. The Retrospect of Medicine by William Braithwaite (1871)
"glycerole OF STARCH. This preparation is made by rubbing well together one ...
The glycerole of starch is a capital substitute for lard in making ointment. ..."
3. The Half-yearly Abstract of the Medical Sciences: Being a Digest of British edited by William Harcourt Ranking, Charles Bland Radcliffe, William Dommett Stone (1863)
"On glycerole of Tar (Tar-plasma) in place of Tar-ointment, in Certain Shin ...
Made according to the above formula, glycerole of tar is a dark brown mass, ..."
4. Physiological materia medica, containing all that is known of the by William H. Burt (1896)
"glycerole of Carbolic Acid. Take two ounces of Carbolic acid and one-half pint
of glycerine. Mix. Glycerite of Borax. Take Borate of Sodium two ounces, ..."
5. Specific medication and specific medicines: Fourth Revision, with an by John Milton Scudder (1881)
"An ointment is prepared by simmering the inner bark in fresh butter (old style),
or a glycerole may be made, with the addition of the usual quantity of ..."