Lexicographical Neighbors of Transfusable
Literary usage of Transfusable
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Life of Mrs. Siddons by Thomas Campbell (1834)
"... which exceed even the power of stage representation; —but it is as full as a
tragedy can be of all the pathos that is transfusable into action. ..."
2. Irritability: A Physiological Analysis of the General Effect of Stimuli in by Max Verworn (1913)
"These are, as is well known, first transformed by secondary chemical processes
into transfusable substances. In this transference the oxydative ..."
3. The Horticultural Register by Sir Joseph Paxton, Joseph Harrison (1835)
"... which at the same time was an elastic and transfusable fluid, readily suggested
the idea of using steam in pipes, instead of smoke in brick flues. ..."
4. Inauguration of the New College of the Free Church, Edinburgh, November by New College (Edinburgh) (1851)
"However well the task of translation may be accomplished, there is always, in
every work of high merit, something not transfusable. To imbibe the author's ..."
5. Code of Federal Regulations: Food and Drugs by Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Staff (2005)
"... transfusable human blood or blood components and plasma. [62 FR 40592, July
29, 1997, as amended at 63 FR 26697, May 13, 1998; 64 FR 399, Jan. ..."
6. Proceedings of the Royal Medical and Chirurgical Society of London by Royal Medical and Chirurgical Society of London (1880)
"If the poison . is actually contained in the milk it would appear to be not
transfusable through mucous membrane, since though it might be destroyed by the ..."