¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Transfuses
1. transfuse [v] - See also: transfuse
Lexicographical Neighbors of Transfuses
Literary usage of Transfuses
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Works of Robt: Leighton by Robert Leighton, George Jerment (1805)
"... but because he is the principle of spiritual and eternal life unto us, a living
foundation that transfuses this life into the whole building, ..."
2. An Introduction to the History of Medicine by Fielding Hudson Garrison (1914)
"Richard Lower transfuses blood from dog to dog. First volume of Philosophical
Transactions (Royal Society) published. Colbert founds Académie des sciences ..."
3. The Works of John Donne: With a Memoir of His Life by John Donne (1839)
"... as God transfuses a measure of this right and power of taking, into them, of
whom he hath said, you are God's, so he transfuses his goodness too, ..."
4. Outline Studies in Acts, Romans, First and Second Corinthians, Galatians and by William Gallogly Moorehead (1902)
"Love is positive and negative, active and passive: it vitalizes every grace,
subdues every passion, transfuses every emotion, sweetens every bitter- ..."
5. The Fundamental Principles of Chemistry: An Introduction to All Text-books by Wilhelm Ostwald (1909)
"If we have to deal with two gases, one of which transfuses rapidly and the other
slowly, then the gas which passes most rapidly will leave the solution ..."
6. Rousseau and Romanticism by Irving Babbitt (1919)
"... transfuses himself into nature in much the same way that Pygmalion transfuses
himself into his statue. Nature is dead, as Rousseau says, unless animated ..."