|
Definition of Sanguification
1. Noun. The formation of blood cells in the living body (especially in the bone marrow).
Generic synonyms: Biological Process, Organic Process
Derivative terms: Haematopoietic, Haemopoietic, Hematopoietic, Hemopoietic
Definition of Sanguification
1. n. The production of blood; the conversion of the products of digestion into blood; hematosis.
Definition of Sanguification
1. Noun. (biology) The production of blood; hematosis. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Medical Definition of Sanguification
1.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Sanguification
Literary usage of Sanguification
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Institutions of Physiology by Johann Friedrich Blumenbach, John Elliotson (1817)
"OF sanguification. 444. THERE is scarcely occasion to remark that we employ the
term sanguification to denote the assimilation of the chyle to the blood, ..."
2. The American Journal of the Medical Sciences by Southern Society for Clinical Investigation (U.S.) (1861)
"... in some manner, the process of sanguification, so as to disturb the normal
relation of proportion existing between the white and the red corpuscles, ..."
3. Annals of Philosophy, Or, Magazine of Chemistry, Mineralogy, Mechanics by Thomas Thomson (1819)
"OK the Phenomena of sanguification, and on the Blood in general. ...
sanguification.—The .chyle from the thoracic duct proceeds into the ..."
4. Principles of human physiology by William Benjamin Carpenter, Henry Power (1864)
"OF ABSORPTION AND sanguification. 1. Of Absorption from the Digestive Cavity.
105. So long as the Alimentary matter remains in the Digestive cavity, ..."
5. The Motion of Fluids, Natural and Artificial: In Particular that of the Air by M[artin] Clare (1737)
"Of DIGESTION, sanguification and NUTRITION. HAVING dipped thus far into the ani^
mal Oeconomy, ... Account of sanguification, or the Manner in which a ..."
6. Questions on anatomy, histology and physiology for the use of students by Corydon La Ford (1878)
"OF sanguification. What is understood by sanguification? ... Is the liver a gland
for sanguification ? State the evidence that the liver contributes to this ..."
7. Animal Physiology by William Benjamin Carpenter (1859)
"sanguification. 222. The Chyle of Vertebrated animals, as taken-up by the lacteals,
may be regarded as blood in an early stage of its formation, ..."
8. The Institutions of Physiology by Johann Friedrich Blumenbach, John Elliotson (1817)
"OF sanguification. 444. THERE is scarcely occasion to remark that we employ the
term sanguification to denote the assimilation of the chyle to the blood, ..."
9. The American Journal of the Medical Sciences by Southern Society for Clinical Investigation (U.S.) (1861)
"... in some manner, the process of sanguification, so as to disturb the normal
relation of proportion existing between the white and the red corpuscles, ..."
10. Annals of Philosophy, Or, Magazine of Chemistry, Mineralogy, Mechanics by Thomas Thomson (1819)
"OK the Phenomena of sanguification, and on the Blood in general. ...
sanguification.—The .chyle from the thoracic duct proceeds into the ..."
11. Principles of human physiology by William Benjamin Carpenter, Henry Power (1864)
"OF ABSORPTION AND sanguification. 1. Of Absorption from the Digestive Cavity.
105. So long as the Alimentary matter remains in the Digestive cavity, ..."
12. The Motion of Fluids, Natural and Artificial: In Particular that of the Air by M[artin] Clare (1737)
"Of DIGESTION, sanguification and NUTRITION. HAVING dipped thus far into the ani^
mal Oeconomy, ... Account of sanguification, or the Manner in which a ..."
13. Questions on anatomy, histology and physiology for the use of students by Corydon La Ford (1878)
"OF sanguification. What is understood by sanguification? ... Is the liver a gland
for sanguification ? State the evidence that the liver contributes to this ..."
14. Animal Physiology by William Benjamin Carpenter (1859)
"sanguification. 222. The Chyle of Vertebrated animals, as taken-up by the lacteals,
may be regarded as blood in an early stage of its formation, ..."