Yes; it is absolutely inodorous, and is better than lard for table uses.
2
Disengages sulphuretted hydrogen when fresh.-Thiswater was inodorous when the bottle was opened.
3
They could all be plainly and vividly coloured with some non-soluble inodorous colour.
4
It dries easily, is inodorous, and of an agreeable flavor like olive oil.
5
Even the young ones spouted plentiful mouthfuls of a not inodorous oil upon them.
6
When well prepared, it is limpid, inodorous, and scarcely yellow.
7
That indigo is best which is lightest, brightest, most copper-coloured, most fine-grained, and inodorous.
8
A North American evergreen species (1656), with scarlet, almost inodorous flowers, produced freely during the summer.
9
The flowers were not delicate and inodorous, but magnificent and deep-scented; and the material of the books was stalwart and vigorous.
10
The produce, which will be quite inodorous, should be thrown, together in a heap, sheltered from wet, and occasionally turned over.
11
The Oil of Behn, being a perfectly inodorous fat oil, is a valuable agent for extracting the odors of flowers by the maceration process.
12
Both parties should keep their arm pits so that they will not be "smelly," and the feet should likewise be kept inodorous.
13
The proportion which this inodorous solid constituents bears to the liquid perfume increases with the unsuitability of the climate, varying from about 18 per cent.
14
When well prepared, it is limpid, inodorous, and almost white; and can then be used not only for burning in lamps, but also for cooking.
15
Strange to say, he found it cool, restful, and, in spite of the dust, absolutely clean, and, but for the scent of heliotrope, entirely inodorous.
16
A number of these sweatings and plungings having, as he supposed, rendered his person perfectly "inodorous," he resumed his trapping with renovated hope.