RICE-WATER, n. A mystic beverage secretly used by our most popular novelists and poets to regulate the imagination and narcotize the conscience.
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Some eyes were still open, gazing with the narcotized stare of the ill.
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The control group were narcotized using propofol, while the observation group were narcotized using etomidate.
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Instead, they had drugged him, keeping him in a narcotized stupor for perhaps several days.
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Some are stupid, mercifully narcotized that they may go to sleep without long tossing about.
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Senility and infancy are by nature normally narcotized.
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I'd been over narcotized, I suddenly knew.
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The object of this with the Indian is to steep his senses more deeply with the narcotizing soporific.
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They stumbled around the compartment in a narcotized trance while Alani's men herded them toward a shuttered hatch.
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She made motions with her tongue as if she found her mouth excessively dry: she was not drunk but narcotized.
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"Was he able to narcotize her?" I asked.
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Harley says that the fakirs begin their performances by taking a large dose of the powerfully stupefying "bang," thus becoming narcotized.
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Alcohol hardens solid tissue, thickens the blood, narcotizes the nerves, and in every conceivable direction antagonizes the operation and function of water-LEES.]
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His palate has become narcotized by the noxious weed, and he has lost, in a great measure, the delicate and enviable taste for fruits.
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With a view to narcotizing them while in this condition, menthol was applied to the water but did not seem to have much effect.