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Definition of Soft glass
1. Noun. Glass having a relatively low softening point.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Soft Glass
Literary usage of Soft glass
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Outlines of Industrial Chemistry: A Text-book for Students by Frank Hall Thorp, Warren Kendall Lewis (1916)
"He dips the pipe into the soft glass, which is called " metal," and gathers a
lump on the end. Then, by blowing through the pipe, while whirling it between ..."
2. Outlines of Industrial Chemistry: A Text-book for Students by Frank Hall Thorp, Warren Kendall Lewis (1916)
"He dips the pipe into the soft glass, which is called " metal," and gathers a
lump on the end. Then, by blowing through the pipe, while whirling it between ..."
3. Chemical Manipulation: Being Instructions to Students in Chemistry on the by Michael Faraday (1842)
"... and that power of retaining the tube between the fingers, which is necessary
to prevent the distortion of soft glass. When heating a tube in the middle, ..."
4. Glass Manufacture by Walter Rosenhain (1919)
"The soft glass at the lower end immediately opens out under the centrifugal
action, and the blower increases the speed of rotation until the soft glass has ..."
5. Descriptive Chemistry by Lyman Churchill Newell (1909)
"The object is molded or blown into the general shape, the design is then cut the
soft glass by a wheel, and the finished object is polished wooden wheel ..."
6. Descriptive Chemistry by Lyman Churchill Newell (1903)
"Flint glass is a silicate of potassium and lead ; it is a lustrous, soft glass,
largely used in making lamp chimneys and globes. Pure flint glass is often ..."
7. Descriptive Chemistry by Lyman Churchill Newell (1903)
"Bohemian glass is the hard glass of which much chemical apparatus is made.
Flint glass is a silicate of potassium and lead; it is a lustrous, soft glass, ..."