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Definition of Spike lavender oil
1. Noun. Pale yellow essential oil obtained from spike lavender used in scenting soaps and cosmetics.
Substance meronyms: French Lavender, Lavandula Latifolia, Spike Lavender
Generic synonyms: Oil
Lexicographical Neighbors of Spike Lavender Oil
Literary usage of Spike lavender oil
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Proceedings of the American Pharmaceutical Association at the Annual Meeting by American Pharmaceutical Association, National Pharmaceutical Convention, American Pharmaceutical Association Meeting (1898)
"John C. Umney calls attention to certain variations observed in the so-called
spike lavender oil at present occurring in the market. While the sp. gr. ..."
2. Proceedings of the American Pharmaceutical Association at the Annual Meeting by American Pharmaceutical Association, National Pharmaceutical Convention (1898)
"John C. Umney calls attention to certain variations observed in the so-called
spike lavender oil at present occurring in the market. While the sp. gr. ..."
3. A Practical Treatise on Animal and Vegetable Fats and Oils: Comprising Both by William Theodore Brannt, Karl Schaedler (1896)
"spike lavender oil is limpid, becoming thicker by exposure to air and by age ...
The chemical composition of spike lavender oil is not yet thoroughly known ..."
4. Allen's Commercial Organic Analysis: A Treatise on the Properties, Modes of by Alfred Henry Allen (1917)
"In regard to Spanish spike lavender oil, it is to be noted that the optical
rotation of the oil (as well as of the first 10% distilled) is more often than ..."
5. The Chemistry of Essential Oils and Artificial Perfumes by Ernest John Parry (1908)
"He found it in much free linalol, but only 3 per cent, of esters. Borneo! was also
present. Spike Oil.—Spike oil, or spike lavender oil, is distilled from ..."
6. The Chemistry of Essential Oils and Artificial Perfumes by Ernest John Parry (1908)
"Spike oil, or spike lavender oil, is distilled from the flowering herb Lavandula
spica, which grows in the same localities as Lavandula vera. ..."
7. Pharmaceutical and Food Analysis: A Manual of Standard Methods for the by Azor Thurston (1922)
"The amount of lavender and spike lavender oil imported into the United States
for the year ending June 30, 1920, ..."