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Definition of Sulphuretted
1. Adjective. Treated or impregnated with sulfur. "Sulfuretted hydrogen"
Definition of Sulphuretted
1. Adjective. (alternative spelling of sulfuretted) ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Lexicographical Neighbors of Sulphuretted
Literary usage of Sulphuretted
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Chemical News and Journal of Industrial Science (1864)
"It is approximately estimated that this gaseous spring alone yielded durin;;
twenty lour hours 223 cubic metres of sulphuretted hydrogen (which is an ..."
2. A Dictionary of Chemistry: On the Basis of Mr. Nicholson's, in which the ...by Andrew Ure, William Nicholson by Andrew Ure, William Nicholson (1821)
"It is extremely soluble in water. Its solution in this liquid occasions a
perceptible refrigeration. Subjected to heat, it evolves much sulphuretted ..."
3. Elements of Chemical and Physical Geology by Gustav Bischof (1855)
"The liquid did not give any reaction with ferrocyanide of potassium, and the
smell of sulphuretted hydrogen had quite disappeared. ..."
4. Elements of Chemical and Physical Geology by Gustav Bischof (1854)
"Dumas* could not recognise either sulphurous acid or sulphur as products of the
slow oxidation of sulphuretted hydrogen, but only sulphuric acid. ..."
5. Elements of Chemistry: In the Order of the Lectures Given in Yale College by Benjamin Silliman (1830)
"sulphuretted HYDRO-SULPHURET OF MAGNESIA. By processes similar to those pointed
out above, magnesia gives but feeble indications of combining with sulphur, ..."
6. A Systematic Handbook of Volumetric Analysis: Or, The Quantitative by Francis Sutton (1882)
"THIS residual process is far preferable to the direct titration of sulphuretted
hydrogen by iodine, as devised by Dupasquier. The principle is based on the ..."
7. A Systematic Handbook of Volumetric Analysis: Or, The Quantitative by Francis Sutton (1882)
"THIS residual process is far preferable to the direct titration of sulphuretted
hydrogen by iodine, as devised by Dupasquier. The principle is based on the ..."