51Թ

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glandulous

[ glan-juh-luhs ]

adjective



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Other 51Թ Forms

  • d·dzܲ·Ա noun
  • ԴDz·d·dzܲ adjective
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51Թ History and Origins

Origin of glandulous1

1350–1400; Middle English glandelous < Latin Իܱōܲ full of kernels. See glandular ( def ), -ous
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Like a gland; full of glands; glandulous; adenous.

From

The Anthrax is very near the same thing as the Carbuncle, only with this difference, that the latter always appears in the Glandulous Parts, and the Anthrax every where else.

From

Neither is it convenient to apply the Actual Cautery to stop the H�morrhage, because it is apt to break forth again anew, when the Escar is fall'n off, When the Tumour is not as yet ulcerated, a Crucial Incision may be made in the Skin, without penetrating into the Glandulous Bodies; then the four Pieces of the Glandules being separated, the Cancerous Tumour may be held with the Forceps, and afterward cut off.

From

Herbert was not mistaken: he broke the stem of a cycas, which was composed of a glandulous tissue, containing a quantity of floury pith, traversed with woody fibre, separated by rings of the same substance, arranged concentrically.

From

These united qualities correct acids in the stomach, cleanse the lungs, and open obstructions in the glands caused by coagulated serum; and the saline pungent oil altering the acids in the glands of the brain, by correcting and attenuating its lympha and succus nervosus, produces the same effect; for the lympha and nervous juice are, like other glandulous humours, liable to acidity and stagnation; therefore these aromatics, by exciting their motion and correcting their acidities, render the liquids of the nerves more volatile, and are therefore justly termed cephalics.

From

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