Definition of Encapsules

1. encapsule [v] - See also: encapsule

Lexicographical Neighbors of Encapsules

encankers
encantation
encapsidated
encapsidation
encapsulant
encapsulants
encapsulate
encapsulated
encapsulated delusion
encapsulates
encapsulating
encapsulation
encapsulations
encapsule
encapsuled
encapsules
encapsuling
encapture
encaptured
encaptures
encapturing
encarditis
encarnalize
encarnalized
encarnalizes
encarnalizing
encarpus
encarpuses
encase
encased

Literary usage of Encapsules

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. A Manual of the Common Invertebrate Animals: Exclusive of Insects by Henry Sherring Pratt (1916)
"It makes its way into the liver, peritoneum, or other organ, where it encapsules itself and here undergoes the greater part of its metamorphosis and attains ..."

2. The British Journal of Dermatology by British Association of Dermatology (1905)
"... appears normal in character, not broken up or thickened, but the massed cells have crowded back the elastin, which thus, as it were, encapsules them. ..."

3. Quain's Elements of Anatomy by Jones Quain, Allen Thomson, George Dancer Thane (1882)
"... of large fibres which encapsules the nucleus, bat :N probably go eventually to the superficial grey matter of the lam ing. g- 285- Fig. 285. ..."

4. The Encyclopaedia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, and General by Thomas Spencer Baynes (1890)
"... the inner coats, encapsules itself, and forms little pill-like masses, and then again enters the tissues of the intestines before becoming mature. ..."

5. A Treatise on Comparative Embryology by Francis Maitland Balfour (1885)
"... a fold of the mucous membrane which completely encapsules the whole chorion, and forms a separate chamber for it, distinct from the general lumen of the ..."

6. Alison and Peter Smithson: From the House of the Future to a House of Today by Alison Margaret Smithson, Peter Smithson, Dirk van den Heuvel, Max Risselada, Beatriz Colomina (2004)
"... Spain, Portugal, Bavaria.5 The rocky place that encapsules a natural grotto in which the new ..."

7. Edinburgh Medical Journal (1891)
"... which forms the nodes and encapsules the bacteria. It is extremely hard, insoluble in moat reagents, is of a pale yellowish colour, stains dark brown ..."

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