The Encyclopedia Britannica1899 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page 9
... seems the body's energy , it has but one source , the decay of living material , i.e. , the oxidation of complex substances diversely built up into various living matters , and but two ends , heat and muscular work . The continued ...
... seems the body's energy , it has but one source , the decay of living material , i.e. , the oxidation of complex substances diversely built up into various living matters , and but two ends , heat and muscular work . The continued ...
Page 21
... seems to have no exact meaning ? But it has an exact meaning . All the evidence at our disposal goes to show that a katastate of any given degree cannot form a fresh katastate of the same degree ; any one katastate can only arise from ...
... seems to have no exact meaning ? But it has an exact meaning . All the evidence at our disposal goes to show that a katastate of any given degree cannot form a fresh katastate of the same degree ; any one katastate can only arise from ...
Page 49
... seems to bear an important relation to certain of the metabolic processes . Phosphates are to be found especially in those parts of plants which are rich in protoplasmic cell - contents . It appears that a supply of phosphate promotes ...
... seems to bear an important relation to certain of the metabolic processes . Phosphates are to be found especially in those parts of plants which are rich in protoplasmic cell - contents . It appears that a supply of phosphate promotes ...
Page 51
... seems reason , from the researches of Hoppe - Seyler and of Carl Kraus , to believe that they are derived from carbohydrates in some such way as the following- Glucose . Pyrocatechin . Succinic acid . 3C8H1208 + 40 = C6H6O2 + 3C4H604 + ...
... seems reason , from the researches of Hoppe - Seyler and of Carl Kraus , to believe that they are derived from carbohydrates in some such way as the following- Glucose . Pyrocatechin . Succinic acid . 3C8H1208 + 40 = C6H6O2 + 3C4H604 + ...
Page 84
... seem to have attempted prose fiction till he was forty , but from that time he was a fertile writer of novels for ... seems to bear much the same relation to Dove , the word of Anglo - Saxon origin , that mutton has to sheep , beef to ...
... seem to have attempted prose fiction till he was forty , but from that time he was a fertile writer of novels for ... seems to bear much the same relation to Dove , the word of Anglo - Saxon origin , that mutton has to sheep , beef to ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
17th century absorbed acid action animal appears artistic become body brain called carbon cards cause cells centre century cerebellum character chief chiefly chlorophyll church clavichord colour connexion consists contains cord corpora quadrigemina death disease early effect England English epic epidemic especially existence feet fibres France French ganglia geotropic gland Government Greek grey matter hand harpsichord important influence irritation king known later less Lithuania living London medulla oblongata ment metabolism metal miles movement muscles nature nerve nerve-cells nervous observed organs oxide oxygen Paris pass Phædo physiological piano Pindar Pinturicchio Pisa Pisistratus Pitt Pius plague plants plate platinum Plato player Płock Podolia poet poetry poison Poland Poles Polish Polycladida posterior pressure probably produced protoplasm regarded Roman Rome Russian sensory side silver Socrates spinet substance surface temperature tion tissue town tube Vistula whole writers