¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Salified
1. salify [v] - See also: salify
Lexicographical Neighbors of Salified
Literary usage of Salified
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Journal of the Royal Institution of Great Britain by Royal Institution of Great Britain (1831)
"Thus a membrane acidified, salified, ... would cease as soon as the partition
became salified. Sulphuretted hydrogen puts an end to the ..."
2. The Principles and methods of therapeutics by Adolphe Gubler (1881)
"Thus the oxides of iron, of zinc and of calcium are salified and dissolved by
the acids contained in the stomach. With regard to iron, this is of great ..."
3. The American Quarterly Review by Robert Walsh (1837)
"I sipped my coffee with great complacency, perfectly salified with the manner in
which, for the first time, I had played the ..."
4. Principles of human physiology by William Benjamin Carpenter (1876)
"... salified egg-albumen, and 1 See a collection of such cases in Dr. Madden's
Experimental Inquiry into the Phv-iology of Cutaneous Absorption, p. ..."
5. The Verbalist: A Manual Devoted to Brief Disenssions of the Right and the by Thomas Embley Osmun (1909)
"This word is often improperly used in a passive sense, thus: " Anything
capable [susceptible] of being salified is ..."
6. The Chemical News and Journal of Industrial Science (1898)
"The author has established that the mutual displacement of two acids—the one free
and the other salified—is a reversible phenomenon governed by the laws of ..."
7. Proceedings of the American Pharmaceutical Association at the Annual Meeting by American Pharmaceutical Association, National Pharmaceutical Convention, American Pharmaceutical Association Meeting (1872)
"Among the salient points resulting from the writer's researches, the most remarkable
is that gold may be readily oxidized and salified by some of the ..."
8. The Journal of the Royal Institution of Great Britain by Royal Institution of Great Britain (1831)
"Thus a membrane acidified, salified, ... would cease as soon as the partition
became salified. Sulphuretted hydrogen puts an end to the ..."
9. The Principles and methods of therapeutics by Adolphe Gubler (1881)
"Thus the oxides of iron, of zinc and of calcium are salified and dissolved by
the acids contained in the stomach. With regard to iron, this is of great ..."
10. The American Quarterly Review by Robert Walsh (1837)
"I sipped my coffee with great complacency, perfectly salified with the manner in
which, for the first time, I had played the ..."
11. Principles of human physiology by William Benjamin Carpenter (1876)
"... salified egg-albumen, and 1 See a collection of such cases in Dr. Madden's
Experimental Inquiry into the Phv-iology of Cutaneous Absorption, p. ..."
12. The Verbalist: A Manual Devoted to Brief Disenssions of the Right and the by Thomas Embley Osmun (1909)
"This word is often improperly used in a passive sense, thus: " Anything
capable [susceptible] of being salified is ..."
13. The Chemical News and Journal of Industrial Science (1898)
"The author has established that the mutual displacement of two acids—the one free
and the other salified—is a reversible phenomenon governed by the laws of ..."
14. Proceedings of the American Pharmaceutical Association at the Annual Meeting by American Pharmaceutical Association, National Pharmaceutical Convention, American Pharmaceutical Association Meeting (1872)
"Among the salient points resulting from the writer's researches, the most remarkable
is that gold may be readily oxidized and salified by some of the ..."