Definition of Emulged

1. emulge [v] - See also: emulge

Lexicographical Neighbors of Emulged

emulating
emulation
emulations
emulative
emulatively
emulator
emulators
emulatory
emulatress
emulatresses
emulatrix
emule
emuled
emules
emulge
emulged (current term)
emulgent
emulges
emulging
emuling
emulous
emulously
emulousness
emulousnesses
emulsible
emulsic
emulsic acid
emulsifiable
emulsification
emulsifications

Literary usage of Emulged

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

1. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London by Royal Society (Great Britain) (1880)
"... was then suspended in water and heated until it became thoroughly emulged with it; acid, either sulphuric or hydrochloric, was now added, whereupon the ..."

2. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine (1822)
"... Are handed neighbourly about. And pinches of a varying dose Conform to each particular nose Are taken out. A stranger box Is oft emulged by ..."

3. Mineral Springs of North America: How to Reach, and how to Use Them by John Jennings Moorman (1873)
"... he should avoid its use until, by proper medical treatment, his biliary organs are emulged, and his system prepared for its reception. ..."

4. The Influence of Tropical Climates on European Constitutions: To which is by James Johnson (1827)
"... the change from dark grey—the colour •which calomel alone gives the mucous secretion—to dark green, we may rest satisfied that the ducts are emulged, ..."

5. The Institutions of Physiology by Johann Friedrich Blumenbach, John Elliotson (1817)
"By the former it is emulged, whenever the stomach, being in a state of repletion, is incumbent upon the pancreas. By the latter, when fresh and crude chyme ..."

6. The Philadelphia Medical Museum by John Redman Coxe (1805)
"... commenced with no great violence, the gall-bladder might be evacuated, and the biliary duels emulged by a dofe of ipecacuanha - ..."

7. The Journal of Foreign Medical Science and Literature edited by Samuel Emlen (1813)
"and its ducts steadily emulged, and duly opened by the operation of mercury, before a cure could be expected. Dysentery, from my experience of it in Holland ..."

8. Edinburgh Medical and Surgical Journal (1853)
"Thus, there was evidence of bile having been emulged by this drug from the excretory passages, but none to shew that an increased quantity had been formed. ..."

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