Lexicographical Neighbors of Nicotin
Literary usage of Nicotin
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Manual of Pharmacology and Its Applications to Therapeutics and Toxicology by Torald Hermann Sollmann (1922)
"nicotin is very resistant to putrefaction, and has been isolated from the decomposed
... nicotin. Successive positions of frog poisoned with 25 mg. nicotin. ..."
2. Special Report on Diseases of Cattle by United States Bureau of Animal Industry, Vickers T. Atkinson, William Dickson, William Heyser Harbaugh, James Law, John Robbins Mohler, William Herbert Lowe, A. J. Murray, Leonard Pearson, Brayton Howard Ransom, Milton R. Trumbower, Richard West Hickma (1916)
"nicotin DIP. The nicotin dip is made with sufficient extract of tobacco, or
nicotin solution, to give a mixture containing not less than five one-hundredths ..."
3. Manual of Qualitative Chemical Analysis by C. Remigius Fresenius (1881)
"nicotin occurs in the leaves and seed of tobacco. In its pure state, it forms a
colorless, ... nicotin has a peculiar, disagreeable, somewhat ethereal, ..."
4. Experimental Pharmacology by Hugh McGuigan (1919)
"Demonstration; nicotin in Tobacco Smoke.— The main active ingredient of ...
To show the nicotin-like action of tobacco smoke, place a couple of frogs in . a ..."
5. Proceedings of the Cambridge Philosophical Society by Cambridge Philosophical Society (1892)
"The following communications were made: (1) The action of nicotin upon tlie ...
When 1 to 3 nigs, of nicotin, in a 1 pc solution, are injected beneath the ..."
6. A System of Chemistry for the Use of Students of Medicine by Franklin Bache, Thomas Thomson (1819)
"THIS substance was discovered by Vauquelin as the nicotin, principle to which
tobacco owes its peculiar properties. It ^ J^arac' is obtained by dissolving ..."
7. A System of Chemistry for the Use of Students of Medicine by Franklin Bache (1819)
"It J^stic""'" is obtained by dissolving the inspissated juice of tobacco in
principle of alcohol, which takes up the nicotin as well as uncombined tob*cco- ..."