Lexicographical Neighbors of Pectise
Literary usage of Pectise
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Chemistry of India Rubber: Including the Outlines of a Theory on by Carl Otto Weber (1903)
"Some colloidal solutions pectise spontaneously on standing, some by boiling, ...
The majority of the inorganic colloids pectise on adding to their solutions ..."
2. Workshop Receipts by Ernest Spon, Robert Haldane, Charles George Warnford Lock (1889)
"In order to pectise paper, &c., thoroughly, when the materials are passed through
the baths at a convenient manufacturing speed, it is essential to use a ..."
3. The Chemistry of India Rubber: Including the Outlines of a Theory on by Carl Otto Weber (1902)
"Some colloidal solutions pectise spontaneously on standing, some by boiling, ...
The majority of the inorganic colloids pectise on adding to their solutions ..."
4. The Journal of the Society of Chemical Industry by Society of Chemical Industry (1884)
"In order to pectise paper, etc., thoroughly when the materials are passed through
the baths at a convenient manufacturing speed, it is essential to use a ..."
5. The Chemical News and Journal of Industrial Science (1864)
"... or, as Professor Graham calls it, pectise—form jelly. The weaker and purer
the solution, the less tendency it has to ..."
6. The Retrospect of Medicine by William Braithwaite (1881)
"... on soft bone and cartilage is to destroy texture by the decomposition of water,
and to fix or pectise the gelatinous matter. ..."