23 Verbs to Use for the Word infusions

The Carolinians with their Scotch blood received also a strong infusion of Scotch logic.

For having introduced tea into Western Asia the inhabitants of the land of "the gul and the bulbul" claim the secret of making a perfect infusion of the celestial leaves.

They had very much more civilisation than the Bushmen, and more than the Damaras, and they contained a large infusion of Dutch blood.

The essential oil, a simple and spirituous water, and a conserve, are kept in the shops: the Edinburgh College directs an infusion of the leaves in the distilled water.

Lex. explains infusion as 'endowments, qualities,' and it may be right.]

[Footnote 18: 'the infusion of his soul into his body,' 'his soul's embodiment.'

And was it not possible, in the second place, that he had not sufficiently heated his infusions and the superjacent air?

Koch found that the addition of an aqueous solution of iodine (1 in 4,000) to meat infusion, in the proportion of 1 in 10, did not in the least interfere with the growth of the bacilli in that medium.

Had Robert needed any infusion of courage and will their appearance alone would have brought it with them.

To obtain a good infusion five spoonfuls of matte are sufficient for a litre of water.

"You were better pour off the first infusion, and use the latter.

Those who travel the country in searching after and gathering plants, if they chance to meet with sour or ill-tasted ale, may amend it by putting an infusion of sea-wormwood into it, whereby it will be more agreeable to the palate, and less hurtful to the stomach.

Francus have written express treatises on this plant, recommending infusions of it, drunk in the form of tea, as very salubrious in many disorders, particularly those of the breast.

But eight quarts of juice from ripe apples called orange, which was evidently acid, as it curdled milk and reddened infusion of turnsole and that of violet, were treated with four drachms of chalk and the white of an egg: it yielded twenty-two ounces of syrup, between thirty-two and thirty-three degrees of the hydrometer, which did not curdle milk.

On this ride I remember a feeble infusion of that excellent spirit which, since the days of Sir Walter Scott, ought to belong to all horse-soldiers, moss-troopers, or mounted rangers, but which I had despaired of ever finding in General Walker's service.

My companion told me that this probably represented an infusion of negro blood, and possibly of mulatto blood, from runaway slaves of the old days, when some of the Matto Grosso mines were worked by slave labor.

We require an infusion of hemlock-spruce or arbor-vitae in our tea.

Do you well apprehend the idea?" While the Alsatian diluted his glass of Aqua fortis, shook into it an infusion of bitters, and tossed off the bumper with apparent relish, I had time to look around the strange apartment.

Line a colander with a thin cloth, and strain the boiling infusion of hops through it onto the flour paste, stirring continually.

" Her manner was playful, almost tender; and Puckers, adding another large infusion of tea, wondered to see her look so soft and kind.

She could not conceive a game wanting the spritely infusion of chance,the handsome excuses of good fortune.

Therefore, if I boil the infusion, cork it up carefully, cementing the cork over with mastic, and then heat the whole vessel by heaping hot ashes over it, I must needs kill whatever germs are present.

This herb has a subacid taste, with a very faint, not disagreeable smell: the juice changes blue vegetable infusions to a red colour, and coagulates milk, thus exhibiting marks of acidity.

23 Verbs to Use for the Word  infusions