Lexicographical Neighbors of Saponine
Literary usage of Saponine
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Scientific Papers by John William Strutt Rayleigh (1902)
"saponine and Soap. A strong infusion of horse-chestnuts allowed ... When the
interiors of equal bubbles of soap and of saponine were brought into ..."
2. Therapeutics: its principles and practice by Horatio C. Wood (1906)
"According to the same authority, chemically pure saponine is physiologically
inert, but saponine of commerce is a very active poison, and all of the plants ..."
3. Therapeutics: its principles and practice by Horatio C. Wood (1906)
"According to the same authority, chemically pure saponine is physiologically
inert, but saponine of commerce is a very active poison, and all of the plants ..."
4. Handbook of Organic Chemistry: For the Use of Students by William Gregory, J. Milton Sanders (1857)
"... is converted into sugar ; by nitric acid, into oxalic and saccharic acids.
It has the composition of starch. saponine is the name given to a variety of ..."
5. Scientific Papers by John William Strutt Rayleigh (1902)
"saponine and Soap. A strong infusion of horse-chestnuts allowed ... When the
interiors of equal bubbles of soap and of saponine were brought into ..."
6. Therapeutics: its principles and practice by Horatio C. Wood (1906)
"According to the same authority, chemically pure saponine is physiologically
inert, but saponine of commerce is a very active poison, and all of the plants ..."
7. Therapeutics: its principles and practice by Horatio C. Wood (1906)
"According to the same authority, chemically pure saponine is physiologically
inert, but saponine of commerce is a very active poison, and all of the plants ..."
8. Handbook of Organic Chemistry: For the Use of Students by William Gregory, J. Milton Sanders (1857)
"... is converted into sugar ; by nitric acid, into oxalic and saccharic acids.
It has the composition of starch. saponine is the name given to a variety of ..."