283 Verbs to Use for the Word heating

"Yes, he felt the heat," he said, as he passed the time of day with other men going by with packs, pack-horses, or draught-dogs, cursing at the trail and at the Government that taxed the miners so cruelly and then did nothing for them, not even making a decent highway to the Dominion's source of revenue.

" Here you see the obedient, loving, long-suffering, put-upon drudge of his brothers and sisters-we will take the liberty of giving him a few of each as we are a little more generous than the authorwho was compelled (not the author, but JACK,) to do all the chores, fetch and carry, 'tend and wait, bear the heat and burden of the day, and be the JACK for all of them.

If the impulse was strong in him to twist the unclean old throat against any further ill-speaking, it gave no heat to the tone in which he answered: "It's you and your kind that say I mean harm to Johnnie, and that I would not marry her.

The ingredient best suited for a poultice is that which retains heat the longest; of these ingredients, the best are linseedmeal, bran, and bread.

But if, in the present state of science, the alternative is offered us,either germs can stand a greater heat than has been supposed, or the molecules of dead matter, for no valid or intelligible reason that is assigned, are able to re- arrange themselves into living bodies, exactly such as can be demonstrated to be frequently produced in another way,I cannot understand how choice can be, even for a moment, doubtful.

The thyroid-centered individual, of the excess thyroid type, actually burns up more food and produces more heat than the ordinary organism.

This metal is easily oxidized, but to bring it to a state of fusibility, it requires a most intense heat.

The dish ought to be slightly heated, otherwise the cold china will extract all the heat from the omelet.

In this way, it would seem inevitable that the surface waters of the northern and southern frigid zones must, sooner or later, find their way to the bottom of the rest of the ocean; and there accumulate to a thickness dependent on the rate at which they absorb heat from the crust of the earth below, and from the surface water above.

" "But how did you proceed?" "I held the vellum again to the fire, after increasing the heat, but nothing appeared.

Buffon says that the Ptarmigan avoids the solar heat, and prefers the frosts of the summits of the mountains; for, as the snow melts on the sides of the mountains, it ascends till it gains the top, where it makes a hole, and burrows in the snow.

They are well calculated to allay heat and thirst in persons afflicted with fevers.

NOT DEAD Walking through trees to cool my heat and pain, I know that David's with me here again.

His expressions were anything but acceptable to the rough-looking crowd, whose ire had been gradually rising to fever heat, and at this point they hooted and hissed him, and shouted, "You black abolitionist, shut up!"

As it was, the lower branches only were destroyed, and the boy was able to endure the heat and smoke until the roaring flames had passed beneath him, and he watched them driving onward in the wake of his flying friends.

" "So it would, my little man," answered Willet, with no grim though grimy smile, "if it didn't take fire and keep getting out of the way all the time it kept up the heat.

The increased activity of the skin helps to reduce the bodily heat.

If the parent finds at any time an unusual heat about the head, the medical man must be at once consulted; or if there is watchfulness or indisposition to sleep at the proper periods, or frequent startings in the sleep, irritability of temper, and much crying, danger should be apprehended, and prompt and judicious means employed.

The face of the latter, however, is more than twelve times as large, and it has not the same silvery appearance as the moon, but is rather of a dingy pink hue, like that of her iron when beginning to lose its red heat.

"Gosh, lookey yonder," he muttered, "that must be Old Heck drivin' his new automobileth' darn fool is goin' to bust something some day, runnin' that car the way he does!" Walking quickly, to escape the heat, he crossed the street to the station.

The mean temperature of the southern half of England is about 48° F. Supposing the earth received only half the sun-heat it now receives, what would then be the probable mean temperature of the South of England?

Keenly as Ericsson was interested in the steam-engine, it must be admitted that he always showed a more profound interest in some form of engine which should be able to displace it with a superior efficiency; and hence his long series of efforts relating to the flame-engine, the caloric engine, the gas-engine, and finally the solar engine,with either steam or heated air as the medium for carrying the heat.

She doesn't mind the heat.

The answer to the old puzzle, I suppose, would be that though the immovable body does not move, yet the impact of the irresistible force generates heat, which, as we know from Tyndall, is a mode of motion.

So the blood is drafted from the non-essential industriesfrom the skin where it serves normally to regulate the heat of the bodyfrom the digestive organs, the stomach and intestine, which must forsooth stop now, since if the organism will die, their last effort of digestion has been donefrom the liver and spleen, great chemical factories in normal times, but now of no moment.

283 Verbs to Use for the Word  heating