Gaseous, non-metallic chemical element with symbol N and atomic number 7.
Sinònims
Examples for "nitrogen"
Examples for "nitrogen"
1One concern is the level of nitrogen fertilizer run-off into water sources.
2Changes in fermentation characteristics reflected the change in source of available nitrogen.
3A lot of nitrogen's going on to help overcome the feed deficit.
4The manure is richer in potash than in nitrogen and phosphoric acid.
5The UN was formed also from nitrate nitrogen in various plant species.
1The question was then reduced to this, the azote being conserved intact-1
2Now the azote would rapidly escape if the port-lights were opened.
3To live as Harrington has lived of late, is to breathe little but azote.
4It is not, like indigo, a substance combined with azote.
5These miasms are probably ternary or quaternary combinations of azote, phosphorus, hydrogen, carbon, and sulphur.
6Oxygene and azote produce nitrous acid 143
7This membrane, exhausted by the alcohol and ether, gives, by an elementary analysis, hydrogen, oxygen, carbon, and azote.
8It is known that the air is composed principally of twenty-one parts of oxygen and seventy-nine parts of azote.
9What has been absorbed is the vital air, and what remains, the azote, which is incapable of supporting flame.
10The accurate proportions are, by measure, oxygen 21, azote 79.
11When a country has been long subjected to cultivation, it is not the proportions between the azote and oxygen that vary.
12Nothing proves that oxygen combines (in the system) with hydrogen and carbon in particular, rather than with sulphur and azote.
13A very simple phenomenon, Man absorbs the oxygen of the air, eminently adapted for sustaining life, and throws out the azote intact.
14There is plenty of wild azote and carbon unappropriated, but it is naught till we have made it up into loaves and soup.
15This proportion they state to be 27 parts of oxygen and 73 parts of azote, in 100 of atmospherical air.
16Never, since man came into this atmosphere of oxygen and azote, was there anything like the condition of the young American of the nineteenth century.