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Definition of Narcotised
1. Adjective. Under the influence of narcotics. "In a stuperous narcotized state"
Lexicographical Neighbors of Narcotised
Literary usage of Narcotised
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Conduction of the Nervous Impulse by Keith Lucas (1917)
"We have already seen the evidence which tells us that the impulse is not extinguished
instantaneously at one point of its passage through a narcotised tract ..."
2. Principles of General Physiology by William Maddock Bayliss (1920)
"If, on the contrary, the nerve is narcotised by the application of an anaesthetic
... The other preparation is narcotised at the same rate over a length, D, ..."
3. The Senses of Insects by Auguste Forel (1908)
"He therefore narcotised two pigeons during the whole journey of 43 kilometres
and left ... Only one of the narcotised birds returned in 4 hours 20 minutes. ..."
4. An Introduction to the Study of the Comparative Anatomy of Animals: A by Gilbert Charles Bourne, Arthur Bolles Lee (1900)
"In half an hour the worms will be more or less narcotised, ... The animals will
be found sufficiently narcotised for fixation in from four to eight hours. ..."
5. The Microtomist's Vade-mecum: A Handbook of the Methods of Microscopic Anatomy by Arthur Bolles Lee (1903)
"In half an hour the worms will be more or less narcotised, ... The animals will
be found sufficiently narcotised for fixation in from four to eight hour? ..."