Cyanide of potassium or cyanogen gas; either would give such an odour.
2
But the tail's mostly ammonia, methane, carbon dioxide, water vapour, cyanogen-
3
The odour of the released gas of cyanogen was strong.
4
The odor of the released gas of cyanogen was strong.
5
He was at that time particularly interested in an investigation on certain cyanogen compounds.
6
There's enough cyanogen in this room already.
7
About a year later (1823) Cutbush discussed the formation of cyanogen in processes not previously noticed.
8
A change in mobility for an N-terminal cyanogen bromide fragment accompanied disulfide cross-linking of the two cysteine residues.
9
So called from the circumstance of cyanogen in its combinations with iron performing a leading part in the process.
10
Having never met this method of preparing cyanogen, experiments were made in the writer's laboratory to verify the statement.
11
They are generally nothing more than mixtures of carbonaceous and cyanogen compounds possessing the well-known carburizing properties of those substances.
12
The oxides in the thoroughly roasted ore will not amalgamate with mercury, and are not acted on by chlorine or cyanogen.
13
The colour instantly changed and became more or less blue, proving the existence of the perferrocyanite of iron and, consequently, of cyanogen.
14
Such is the "cyanogen hypothesis" of the origin of life, advocated by able physiologists such as Pfluger, Verworn, and others.
15
But in two hours you two impostors will be suffocated-perhapsyou will die of cyanogen, like Morowitch, whose jewels I have at last.
16
There is one complex chemical substance in particular, called cyanogen, which is either an important constituent of living matter, or closely akin to it.