¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Lignocelluloses
1. lignocellulose [n] - See also: lignocellulose
Lexicographical Neighbors of Lignocelluloses
Literary usage of Lignocelluloses
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Technology of Cellulose Esters: A Theoretical and Practical Treatise on the by Edward Chauncey Worden (1921)
"The explosive bodies formed by the nitration of such lignocelluloses as jute,
have been investigated by C. Cross and E. Bevan,1 by O. Muhlhauser, ..."
2. Researches on Cellulose 1895-1900 by Charles Frederick Cross (1901)
"... which so closely resemble those of the lignocelluloses that there is little
doubt that these particular reactions must be referred to the presence of ..."
3. Encyclopédie Universelle Des Industries Tinctoriales Et Des Industries edited by Jules Garçon (1905)
"[Réaction des lignocelluloses et Théorie de la teinture] A reaction of the
lignocelluloses and the theory of dyeing ; GF CROSS et EJ BEVAN, 104-106. ..."
4. A Dictionary of Applied Chemistry by Thomas Edward Thorpe (1921)
"The lignocelluloses have many-sided affinities for colouring matters, ...
Other less characteristic reactions of the lignocelluloses may bo briefly ..."
5. A Text-book of Paper-making by Charles Frederick Cross, Edward John Bevan, J. F. Briggs (1907)
"The lignocelluloses, of which we have briefly described the typical jute-fibre,
... We may instance as lignocelluloses of closely related composition and ..."
6. The Chemical News and Journal of Industrial Science (1895)
"After boiling with alkaline solutions as above, and washing, the substance gives
with chlorine the ordinary reaction of lignocelluloses, forming a yellow ..."
7. Cellulose: An Outline of the Chemistry of the Structural Elements of Plants by Charles Frederick Cross, Edward John Bevan, Clayton Beadle (1895)
"It is, therefore, generally established that the lignocelluloses are connected
on the one hand with the celluloses, and on the other with the derivatives of ..."