The History of a mouthful of bread, and its effect on the organization of men and animalsHarper, 1866 - 399 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 33
Página 77
... follows , that by the aid of its discriminat ing tact ( which is not easy to elude ) the pylorus allows some to pass , while it turns back others , until all in succession are converted into chyme . For example , in the case of a ...
... follows , that by the aid of its discriminat ing tact ( which is not easy to elude ) the pylorus allows some to pass , while it turns back others , until all in succession are converted into chyme . For example , in the case of a ...
Página 99
... follow the fate of that golden aliment the chyle , which is now in a condition to support the life of the body , and every drop of which will turn into blood - the blood which beats at our hearts , nourishes our limbs , and sets at work ...
... follow the fate of that golden aliment the chyle , which is now in a condition to support the life of the body , and every drop of which will turn into blood - the blood which beats at our hearts , nourishes our limbs , and sets at work ...
Página 107
... follow- ing close at each other's heels indefinitely ? By a similar artifice the engineer would change his meagre little run- nel into an inexhaustible fountain . The water drawn up from the watercourse by each stroke of the pump would ...
... follow- ing close at each other's heels indefinitely ? By a similar artifice the engineer would change his meagre little run- nel into an inexhaustible fountain . The water drawn up from the watercourse by each stroke of the pump would ...
Página 117
... follows all the movements of the large one , but because it carries forward the work which the other begins , and assists also in propelling the blood to the furthest extremities of the limbs , driving it on in its turn at each of its ...
... follows all the movements of the large one , but because it carries forward the work which the other begins , and assists also in propelling the blood to the furthest extremities of the limbs , driving it on in its turn at each of its ...
Página 119
... follows all the way down the back , just to the top of the loins . There it is , so to speak , almost unassailable ; in fact hardly , any cases are known of the Aorta being wounded ; to get at it , it would be necessary to bestow one of ...
... follows all the way down the back , just to the top of the loins . There it is , so to speak , almost unassailable ; in fact hardly , any cases are known of the Aorta being wounded ; to get at it , it would be necessary to bestow one of ...
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Otras ediciones - Ver todas
The History of a Mouthful of Bread; And Its Effect On the Organization of ... Jean Macé Vista previa limitada - 2023 |
Términos y frases comunes
albumen aliments animal aorta arteries begin bile birds body bones bread breathe called canal canines carbonic acid Carnivora carried cetaceans charcoal chyle chyliferous vessels chyme Cloth cockchafer combustible comes cook crustaceans dear child diaphragm digestive tube duodenum everything explain fact feet fibrine fire fishes gills give globules goes Half Calf hand head heart hydrogen incisors insects intestine labor learned LETTER little girl liver lives look lungs machine mammals matter means molars mollusk mouth muscles nature never nourishment oesophagus once organs ounces ourselves oxygen pachydermata pass poor porter pouch pylorus remember reptiles ruminants side sometimes soon sort speak stomach substance swallow talking teeth tell thing tion told tongue tree turn veins venous blood vertebral column whole wonderful wood word worm Zoophytes
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Página 237 - Well, It is no more red than the water of a stream would be if you were to fill it with little red fishes. Suppose the fishes to be very, very small, as small as a grain of sand, and closely crowded together through the whole depth of the stream, the water would look red...