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Definition of Tooth powder
1. Noun. A dentifrice in the form of a powder.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Tooth Powder
Literary usage of Tooth powder
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The New International Encyclopædia edited by Daniel Coit Gilman, Harry Thurston Peck, Frank Moore Colby (1902)
"... parts of bleaching-powder (chloride of lime) to 100 of the tooth-powder removes
the fetid character of the breath, and also tends to whiten the teeth. ..."
2. The Techno-chemical Receipt Book: Containing Several Thousand Receipts by William Theodore Brannt, William Henry Wahl (1886)
"Circassian tooth powder. and mix : Prepared buck's born Potassium sulphate ...
Bed tooth powder. Powder and mix: Ordinary alum 24 " Round lake 5 parts. ..."
3. A Manual of Personal Hygiene: Proper Living Upon a Physiologic Basis by Walter Lytle Pyle (1915)
"The brushing should be practised after each meal and before going to bed, and
once daily should be accompanied by the use of a tooth-powder sufficiently ..."
4. A Manual of Personal Hygiene: Proper Living Upon a Physiologic Basis by Walter Lytle Pyle (1912)
"The brushing should be practised after each meal and before going to bed, and
once daily should be accompanied by the use of a tooth-powder sufficiently ..."
5. Social Life in the Reign of Queen Anne: Taken from Original Sources by John Ashton (1882)
"... '—tooth powder—Hair dye— Spectacles. THERE was one social habit that the two
sexes had in common, and that was in taking snuff: nay, ..."