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Definition of Soap flakes
1. Noun. Soap that has been cut into flakes to make suds faster.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Soap Flakes
Literary usage of Soap flakes
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Modern Business Writing by Charles Harvey Raymond (1921)
"In the following advertisement, logical reasons as to why Ivory soap flakes render
better service than do competing soap flakes, are presented in an ..."
2. Modern Business Writing by Charles Harvey Raymond (1921)
"In the following advertisement, logical reasons as to why Ivory soap flakes render
better service than do competing soap flakes, are presented in an ..."
3. A Short Course in Advertising by Alex Faickney Osborn (1921)
"What good would it do the manufacturers of Lux simply to advertise the virtues
of soap flakes ? They have made "Lux" mean soap flakes. ..."
4. Helping Your Child Get Ready for School: With Activities for Children from by Nancy Paulu (1993)
"... made with soap flakes, water, food coloring or powdered tempera; an eggbeater
or fork; a bowl; a spoon; an apron or smock; newspapers or a large piece ..."
5. The Encyclopedia Americana: A Library of Universal Knowledge (1920)
"When the soap flakes are entirely homogeneous they go into a machine called
the "plodder," a cylindrical or conical casing in which revolves a longitudinal ..."
6. The Scientific American Cyclopedia of Formulas: Partly Based Upon the 28th by Albert Allis Hopkins (1910)
"(5) soap flakes, 44 Ib.: powdered borax, 5 Ib. : powdered French chalk, 4 Ib.
Spread the flakes out, sift borax and chalk over, moving about, ..."
7. Artworks for Kids: Grades 1-6 by Evans Joy (2001)
"Mix tempera and paste or dry soap flakes in this ratio: 1/2 cup (120 ml) tempera
to 1/3 cup (80 g) paste or soap flakes. Leave the lumps to add texture to ..."
8. Soap-making Manual: A Practical Handbook on the Raw Materials, Their by Edgar George Thomssen (1922)
"... when the latter is turned in a vertical position, as well as the condition of
the iron surface from which the soap flakes have fallen. ..."