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Example sentences for "aspirate"

Lexicographically close words:
aspic; aspidistra; aspin; aspirant; aspirants; aspirated; aspirates; aspirating; aspiration; aspirations
  1. Aspirate into the pipette one volume of washed cells, air index, one volume of bacterial emulsion, air index, and one volume of specific serum (see Fig.

  2. Fit a rubber teat to the open end of the barrel, and so complete a pipette which can be depended upon to always aspirate and deliver exactly 5 cm.

  3. Open the stop-cock of tube a and with two or three strokes of the air pump, aspirate a small quantity of gas, so creating a slight vacuum.

  4. Take another similarly prepared pipette and aspirate into it equal volumes of washed cells, bacterial emulsion and pooled serum.

  5. Aspirate some of the inoculated media into capillary pipettes.

  6. Proceeding as before, aspirate a volume of serum into the capillary stem up to the level of the pencil mark.

  7. The aspirate can be added, if relished, to any centre slang word.

  8. It may be preceded by the aspirate h, or by some consonant, as may be thought necessary.

  9. The letter H was usually the point of attack, the aspirate being the simplest of all the powers of the letters.

  10. The teacher, holding up the hand of the pupil, makes the aspirate by breathing upon his palm.

  11. From a small list gathered by my father I judge that the aspirate is probably similar to the Iowa, and that the subvocal represents Dak and I E dentals.

  12. Hayden does not distinguish the subvocal and aspirate th in Omaha.

  13. If this were true, we should suppose that the expression of contempt was chiefly conveyed by the aspirate f, by the strong emission of the breathing with half-opened lips.

  14. But fiend is a participle from a root fian, to hate; in Gothic fijan; and as a Gothic aspirate always corresponds to a tenuis in Sanskrit, the same root in Sanskrit would at once lose its expressive power.

  15. This aspirate likewise appears in Anglo-Saxon, where he loves is lufaeth.

  16. For there is no authority which can justify the inserting of the aspirate or the doubling of the vowel.

  17. The difference between a palatial and a guttural aspirate is very small.

  18. The inserting of the common aspirate too, is improper.

  19. The inserting the common aspirate too, is improper.

  20. The sound of the consonant H, (though articulate and audible when properly uttered,) is little more than an aspirate breathing.

  21. For there is no authority which can justify the inserting the aspirate or doubling the vowel.

  22. What Combination is both Aspirate and Subvocal?

  23. When an aspirate and subvocal comes together, it is necessary to change the sound of one or the other, to make the combination pronounceable.

  24. Seve, which was apparently the pronunciation of the Assyrian form, the aspirate having the effect of changing b into bh or v).

  25. Words ending with subvocal sounds should be selected for practice on the subvocals; words beginning or ending with aspirate sounds may be used for practice on the aspirates.

  26. It may have been so written here, but it seems to be a form of the guttural aspirate gh, for which it is exchanged in many cases, here and in Kitchiwangh.

  27. This aspirate is of frequent occurrence in the Iroquois dialects, but it is not a radical element.

  28. The aspirate k was frequently dropped by European scribes; it does not represent a radical element.

  29. This scanty number, however, is eked out by interposing an aspirate between certain initial consonants and the vowel, so that for instance p'u is distinguished from pu.

  30. The Greeks borrowed it with the value of the ordinary aspirate and with the name [Greek: eta].

  31. The Roman aspirate was, however, a very slight sound which in some words where it was etymologically correct disappeared at an early date.

  32. In official documents at Athens H represented the rough breathing or aspirate ' till 403 B.

  33. In none of the Romance languages is there any trace of initial or medial h, which shows that vulgar Latin had ceased to have the aspirate by 240 B.

  34. Having once hesitated to aspirate in recent rheumatic pericarditis with copious effusion in a lad, and found a large amount of pus in the sac after death, I would warn against hesitancy under such circumstances.

  35. The Aspirate Quality is used in the utterance of secrecy and fear, and discontent generally takes this quality.

  36. The aspirate is usually combined with other qualities and the earnestness and other expressive effects of aspiration may be spread over a whole sentence or it may be restricted to a single word.

  37. Sometimes the ch is best rendered as an aspirate only, the c being treated as if silent.

  38. The aspirate h is often inserted between the definite article and a noun beginning with a vowel.

  39. Whenever therefore a vowel ends a word, the next ought to begin with a consonant, or what is equivalent to it; as our w and h aspirate plainly are.

  40. However, the aspirate h must not be lightly overpassed, having a striking value in verse.

  41. If the sound is intended to warn against the approach of an enemy, or something strange, the same vowel element is used, but terminates with the aspirate sound of "h" pronounced with energy and distinctness.

  42. The two words are the same in vowel quality, but they differ in the time required to utter them, and the final breathing and aspirate effects.

  43. This orthography engenders the false notion that [theta] differed from [tau] by the addition of the aspirate h.

  44. In neither Welsh nor Irish occurs the true aspirate of g.

  45. In neither Welsh nor Irish occurs the true aspirate of c; which, being wanting, is replaced by the sound of the ch in the German auch, here spelt c.

  46. In Irish we have the same, but only as far as b is concerned; the aspirate of d (dh) being wanting in that language.

  47. When a so-called aspirate is substituted for a lene, the word is said to take an aspiration, and bheul is written beul.

  48. To guard against similar false notions, I rarely hereafter use the word aspirate without qualifying it by the addition of the adjective so-called.

  49. Although the same word (a) means her, his, and its, it induces the aspirate only when it is either masculine or neuter.

  50. The origin of the word aspirate I imagine to be as follows.

  51. In Irish--the prepositions either eclipse the noun that they govern or else aspirate it.

  52. The same person, curiously enough, would put in the aspirate where it was not required.

  53. To drop the aspirate is a common failing of half-educated Lancashire people (though this special weakness is by no means peculiar to Lancashire folk), and sometimes gives a ludicrous turn to a remark.


  54. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "aspirate" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.
    Other words:
    aspirate; breathe; inhale; inspire; mumble; murmur; mutter; sigh; sniff; sniffle; snuff; snuffle; suck; suckle; whisper