Lexicographical Neighbors of Interdiffused
Literary usage of Interdiffused
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Macrocosm and Microcosm, Or, The Universe Without and the Universe by William Fishbough (1852)
"The substance of all suns and systems composing our firmament, may be supposed
also to have been previously interdiffused in one amorphous, ..."
2. Lessons in Chemical Philosophy: An Introductory Study for Use in Colleges by John Howard Appleton, Herbert William Conn (1890)
"(a) The constituents are more thoroughly intermingled or interdiffused than is
possible in mere mixtures. For the minutest portions that can be recognized ..."
3. The History of the Reign of George III, to the Termination of the Late War by Robert Bisset (1816)
"... whose legal doctrines have owed a great part of their formation to the civil
law. have interdiffused itself through municipal institutions, ..."
4. The Chemical News and Journal of Industrial ScienceChemistry (1902)
"... by dissolution in much water becomes a pair or a binary system of two
interdiffused quasi-substances called " ions." These ions must differ from ..."
5. Hydration and Growth by Daniel Trembly MacDougal (1920)
"... although it is not to be assumed that the components in this case or in any
preparation, or in protoplasm, are mutually interdiffused. ..."
6. The Camera and the Pencil by Marcus Aurelius Root (1864)
"It is now demonstrated, that in the sunbeam, in its primary state, are combined
and equably interdiffused light, heat, and a third principle, ..."