But we have blood in our veins and lime in our bones.
5
He squeezed some juice from the lime slice floating in the glass.
1
The remote limestone in the north of the country was quite good.
2
I'm not absolutely sure, but I think they used limestone before that.
3
Good building-stone was procurable everywhere; limestone at a distance of five miles.
4
The lower is the cross-bedded sandstone, and the upper the cherty limestone.
5
You can purchase and apply different types of limestone to your soil.
1
It cannot be doubted that lime (coctilis calx), which is snow-white and lighter than sponge, is useful for the mightiest buildings.
2
In this connection Lavoisier says: We have, therefore, laid aside the expression metallic calx altogether, and have substituted in its place the word oxide.
3
From the melted ore, in this subterranean region of infernal aspect, is produced a calx, or cinder, of which there is an enormous mountain.
1
Thus lime ( calciumoxide) is made by strongly heating calcium carbonate:
2
In modern manufacturing processes, sodium carbonate and calciumoxide are usually added to the base silica.
3
The precipitate of calcium oxalate may be converted into calciumoxide by ignition without previous drying.
4
Hitherto, for the sake of simplicity, the by-product in the preparation of acetylene has been described as calciumoxide or quicklime.
5
As the calciumoxide absorbs moisture from the air, it must (after cooling) be weighed as rapidly as possible.
1
With the bonga is thrown in a powder of quicklime.
2
I've buried envy in a deep pit and covered it with quicklime.
3
For use you must scrape some of it off, mix it with quicklime, and moisten it with milk.
4
Make a poultice of quicklime slaked in soft soap, and bind it on the finger; renew it every half hour.
5
The white wash used on the board and pale fences consisted of quicklime slacked under water and gently stirred during this process.
1
So all over the ground about the plants sprinkle unslakedlime.
2
The white of egg, with unslakedlime, has been known to give immediate relief.
3
Lime Water.-Intoan earthen jar containing hot water stir a handful of fresh unslakedlime.
4
For an alkaline dentifrice, there is nothing better than lime-water, made from coarse, unslakedlime.
5
Boiling water, pitch and oil, molten lead, and unslakedlime, were poured upon them every moment.
1
Some heat is also gained by the slaking of the causticlime within the liquor.
2
First, quicklime, which is also called burnt lime, causticlime, builders' lime, rock lime, and unslaked lime.
3
These nitrates are neutral salts and do not act on manure as causticlime or wood ashes would do.
4
It was an analysis of some causticlime from Tuscany, which had been sent to Davy by the Duchess of Montrose.
5
As already intimated, Faraday had contributed many of his minor papers-includinghis first analysis of causticlime-tothe 'Quarterly Journal of Science.'
1
With every crop the limestone has given better results than the burnedlime.
2
They made kilns and burnedlime for top-dressing.
3
Their far-sightedness and patriotism combine to lead them to try to sell carloads of limestone instead of tons of burnedlime.
4
It looked like burnedlime, or else the secretions of about a billion birds; and there were no birds to speak of.
5
Burnedlime may cause injury.
1
He burntlime, dragged timber, and tugged at the oar.
2
First, quicklime, which is also called burntlime, caustic lime, builders' lime, rock lime, and unslaked lime.
3
The contents of the husk pits might advantageously be mixed up with the burntlime, when a sufficiency of it has been saved.
4
The Samuel process (experiment 20) consisted in the injection, first, of a solution of sulphate of iron, and afterward of common burntlime.