¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Tonicities
1. tonicity [n] - See also: tonicity
Lexicographical Neighbors of Tonicities
Literary usage of Tonicities
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. International Clinics: A Quarterly of Clinical Lectures by Henry W. Cattell (1901)
"As all osmotic interchanges in the body depend upon the osmotic pressures or
tonicities of the interacting substances, the determination of these ..."
2. Foundations of Psychiatry by William Alanson White (1911)
"The affects are the psychological reverberations, so to speak, of the autonomically
conditioned visceral and postural tonicities which thus become the ..."
3. Foundations of pyschiatry [sic] by William Alanson White (1921)
"The affects are the psychological reverberations, so to speak, of the autonomically
conditioned visceral and postural tonicities which thus become the ..."
4. Educational Problems by Granville Stanley Hall (1911)
"The reflex tonicities music causes are of pedagogic value. Sometimes the deaf
take peculiar and very likely affected pleasure in coming into contact with ..."
5. Contributions to Medical and Biological Research by William Osler (1919)
"... in part represented by physiological functions that take the form of visceral
and postural tonicities. The head end of the principal, axial, ..."
6. The Journal of Medical Research (1906)
"The resistance of the red . . . corpuscles of the horse to salt solutions of
different tonicities before and after repeated withdrawals of blood ..."
7. A Practical Text-book of Infection, Immunity, and Specific Therapy: With by John Albert Kolmer (1915)
"RESISTANCE OF RED BLOOD-CORPUSCLES TO SALT SOLUTION OF VARIOUS tonicities.
NON-SPECIFIC HEMOLYSIS 1. Arrange a series of twenty-three small sterile ..."
8. Monographic Medicine by Albion Walter Hewlett, Lewellys Franklin Barker, Milton Howard Fussell, Henry Leopold Elsner (1916)
"... of different tonicities before and after repeated withdrawals of blood. J.
Med. Research, Boston, 1906, xv, 425-447. 4. Determination of the Response of ..."