PROTOPLASM.-Thelivingsubstance in the cells which compose our bodies.
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They are livingsubstance still mingled painfully with the dust.
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Is it not rather the recognition by the livingsubstance of the lifeless one?
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Is it better for a man to be created from a livingsubstance or from earth?
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Is it the action of a dead substance, which cannot act upon a livingsubstance that can?
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Suddenly, Mrs. Holland placed a bowl of some dark, vaguely livingsubstance on the table in front of Nate.
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It is true that it cannot create either the livingsubstance or the variations of it; both must be given.
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According to him the livingsubstance in all organisms consists of two quite distinct kinds of plasm, somatic and germinal.
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All these spurts of a livingsubstance were part of one gigantic whole, which was straining to move the steps.
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Digestion had not been impaired in this case, but the blood formed by it was not converted into good livingsubstance.
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One of the most striking effects of external disturbance on certain types of livingsubstance is a visible change of form.
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Spirit, according to Webster, is: 'Life or livingsubstance considered independent of corporeal existence-vitalessence, force, or energy as distinct from matter.'
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At some time in the remote past, there must, according to the theory, have been a development of livingsubstance from a mineral base.
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There must be permanent pores in the membrane to receive food or let out rays of the livingsubstance to act as oars or arms.
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Irra!" and "Give us a ride!" he pelted them with snowballs made from the livingsubstance of his steed, and galloped off, jeering.
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29), a livingsubstance is better than a substance that does not live.