Spongy Sentence Examples

spongy
  • Has light grey or brown close thick wool half an inch deep without any top hair, with a rather thick spongy pelt.

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  • Also when I played it it felt a lot more " spongy " owing to the detached console.

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  • All these diseases resulted in parts of the brain becoming spongy the nerve cells replaced by holes.

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  • Spongy iron acts most rapidly, and after this follow iron turnings and then sheet clippings.

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  • The reduced particles sinter together into a spongy mass which is crushed into a powder.

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  • It 's perfect - not spongy in the least.

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  • Some colonies are soft with a spongy texture, some are like ferns, some form huge luscious quill feather shapes.

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  • As bone loss occurs in spongy bone, the thick plates and rods become very thin and the continuity of structure is lost.

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  • The amazing grace snugly up against spongy modeling material.

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  • Cake is your canvas and your Halloween cake ideas will revolve around that spongy goodness.

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  • The important thing to realize is the tofu's spongy texture absorbs the taste of seasonings and foods with which it is cooked.

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  • This spongy texture can be made firmer, if you drain the water and blot water from the tofu.

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  • They don't require anything more than sticking a topper through buttercream or soft, spongy cake layers, and the variety available is inspiring.

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  • For moist spongy spots near the rock garden, or by the side of a rill, it is one of the best plants, but its beauty is best seen when it is allowed to ramble over rich, muddy soil.

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  • It is less trouble out of doors than under glass; indeed, it only requires a moderately wet bog in a light spongy soil of fibrous peat and chopped Sphagnum Moss.

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  • Organic all-purpose may not be the best choice for extremely light, spongy cakes or high-rising artisan breads, but it's a staple supply that all bakers should have on hand.

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  • Frubi Shades are spongy, form-fitting and the Ultraguard Lens is specially designed for maximum protection.

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  • First, these shades are made of a soft, spongy, molded material, and unlike their hard plastic counterparts, feel great.

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  • The spongy material that the Frubi Shades are made of is designed to float.

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  • Bone marrow-The spongy tissue inside the large bones in the body that is responsible for making the red blood cells, most white blood cells, and platelets.

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  • The bone marrow is the spongy tissue found in the large bones of the body.

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  • Injera is a spongy, sour flatbread, traditional to Ethiopia and Eritrea.

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  • The article also explains how the spongy bottom of the shoe offers so little shock absorption that the foot rolls in more than it normally would.

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  • Known for its lightweight and highly responsive material, phylon creates an outstanding shoe sole that conforms to the foot, provides a spongy resistance and doesn't add significant weight to the shoe.

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  • This method can create either a thick, spongy fabric, such as an afghan, or elongated stitches that spread the rows apart.

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  • Moreover, unless the conditions are closely watched, it is liable to be thrown down in a spongy form.

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  • The Blue Clay forms, at the higher levels, a stratum impervious to water, and holds up the rainfall, which soaks through the spongy mass of the superimposed coralline formations.

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  • Porous carbon blocks, made by strongly heating a mixture of powdered charcoal with oil, resin, &c., were introduced about a generation later, and subsequently various preparations of iron (spongy iron, magnetic oxide) found favour.

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  • The largest class are the unilocular, or simple, external galls, divided by Lacaze-Duthiers into those with and those without a superficial protective layer or rind, and composed of hard, or spongy, or cellular tissue.

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  • The young are nourished by a substance formed by the cells which cover the spongy inter-lamellar outgrowths.

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  • The male urethra begins at the bladder and runs through the prostate and perineum to the penis, which it traverses as far as the tip. It is divided into a prostatic, membranous and spongy part, and is altogether about 8 inches in length.

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  • Opening into the spongy urethra where it passes through the bulb are the ducts of two small glands known as Cowper's glands, which lie on each side of the membranous urethra and are best seen in childhood.

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  • For most of these the lightest spongy but sweet turfy peat must be used, this being packed lightly about the roots, and built up above the pot-rim, or in some cases freely mixed before use with chopped sphagnum moss and small pieces of broken pots or nodules of charcoal.

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  • A very weak current gives a pale and brittle deposit, but as the current-density is increased up to a certain point, the properties of the metal improve; beyond this point they deteriorate, the colour becoming darker and the deposit less coherent, until at last it is dark brown and spongy or pulverulent.

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  • Merrill, it decomposes when heated, and gives cupric hydride, CuH 21 as a reddish-brown spongy mass, which turns to a chocolate colour on exposure.

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  • The idea that this film of bacteria oxidizes the alcohol beneath by merely condensing atmospheric oxygen in its interstices, after the manner of spongy platinum, has long been given up; but the explanation of the action as an incomplete combustion, depending on the peculiar respiration of these organisms - much as in the case of nitrifying and sulphur bacteria - is not clear, though the discovery that the acetic bacteria will not only oxidize alcohol to acetic acid, but further oxidize the latter to CO 2 and 01-1 2 supports the view that the alcohol is absorbed by the organism and employed as its respirable substance.

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  • A year later he noticed that spongy platinum in presence of oxygen can bring about the ignition of hydrogen, and utilized this fact to construct his "hydrogen lamp," the prototype of numerous devices for the self-ignition of coal-gas burners.

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  • Dobereiner discovered the combination of SO 2 and 0 into SO 3 by means of spongy platinum.

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  • After death from chronic poisoning it is found present even in the brain and spongy bone.

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  • The research will use Arabidopsis as a model for species which primarily accumulate Ca in the palisade and spongy mesophyll.

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  • We spread out and walked across a treeless plain on a very spongy area.

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  • They have quite a mild mushroom flavor but a texture which stays slightly spongy, a bit like French toast.

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  • It's perfect - not spongy in the least.

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  • I did find the breaking rather spongy, tho.

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  • The tunneling activity of the larvae can cause the turf to feel spongy underfoot.

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  • The knees are of a soft spongy texture and act as breathing organs, supplying the roots with air,, which they would otherwise be unable to obtain when submerged.

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  • They derive this moisture from the air by means of aerial roots, developed from the stem and bearing an outer spongy structure, or velamen, consisting of empty cells kept open by spiral thickenings in the wall; this sponge-like tissue absorbs dew and rain and condenses the moisture of the air and passes it on to the internal tissues.

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  • The vascular system is not extensive, the arteries soon ending in the well-marked spongy tissue which builds up the muscular foot, parapodia, and dorsal body-wall.

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  • The fibrous nervetissue is more dense in the higher differentiated, more loose and spongy in the lower organized 1P L forms; the cellular nerve-tissue is FIG.

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  • But the material was also subject to other defects, such as moisture lurking between the layers, which might be detected by strokes of the mallet; spots or stains; and spongy strips (taeniae), in which the ink would run and spoil the sheet.

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  • The residual gas is then passed through a tube containing porous materials, such as woodor bone-charcoal, platinized pumice or spongy platinum, then mixed with steam and again forced through the tube.

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  • The coagulated rubber separates as a mass of spongy caoutchouc. If the coagulation has been effected in shallow dishes, the rubber is obtained in a thin cake of similar shape known as a " biscuit."

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  • The watery portion of the latex soaks into the trunk, and the soft spongy rubber which remains is kneaded and pressed into lumps or balls.

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  • As the buds develop the canal system becomes much extended, and calcareous tissue is deposited between the network of canals, the confluent edgezones of mother zooid and bud forming a coenosarc. As the process continues a number of calicles are formed, imbedded in a spongy tissue in which the canals ramify, and it is impossible to say where the theca of one corallite ends and that of another begins.

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  • The metal sinks through the ignited fuel, forming, in the hearth, a spongy mass or ball, which is lifted out by the smelters at the end of each operation, and carried to the forge hammer.

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  • It may be obtained in the spongy form by igniting iridium ammonium chloride, and this variety of the metal readily oxidizes when heated in air.

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  • By the addition of sodium amalgam to a concentrated solution of ammonium chloride, the so-called ammonium amalgam is obtained as a spongy mass which floats on the surface of the liquid; it decomposes readily at ordinary temperatures into ammonia and hydrogen; it does not reduce silver and gold salts, a behaviour which distinguishes it from the amalgams of the alkali metals, and for this reason it is regarded by some chemists as being merely mercury inflated by gaseous ammonia and hydrogen.

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  • In January 1873 the party got among the endless spongy jungle on the east of Lake Bangweulu, Livingstone's object being to go round by the south and away west to find the "fountains."

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  • The ear loses its starch, and ceases to grow, and its ovaries become penetrated with the white spongy tissue of the mycelium of the fungus which towards the end of the season forms the sclerotium, in which state the fungus lies dormant through the winter.

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  • Between the forests of these stretch numerous peat-mosses, which contain in their spongy reservoirs the sources of many small streams. On the Brocken are found one or two arctic and several alpine, plants.

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  • In the Disconectae the coenosarc forms a spongy mass, the " centradenia," which is partly hepatic in function, forming the socalled liver, and partly excretory.

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  • The stomata are in direct communication with the ample system of intercellular spaces which is found in the loosely arranged mesophyll (spongy tissue) on that side.

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  • The wood is generally reddish-brown, light and of a coarse grain and spongy texture, easy to work, but liable to shrink and warp. Mountain-grown wood is harder, stronger, less liable to warp and more durable.

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  • In other cases, a similar formation of spongy but dead periderm tissue may occur for the same purpose in special patches, called pneumatodes, on the roots of certain trees living in marshy places, which rise above the soil in order to obtain air.

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  • The central body seems to consist merely of a spongy mass of slightly stainable substance, more or less impregnated with chromatin, which divides by constriction.

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  • This soil is spongy, and, undergoing alternate contraction and expansion from being alternately comparatively dry and saturated with moisture, allows the heavy blocks to slip down by their own weight into the valley, where they become piled up, the valley stream afterwards removing the soil from among and over them.

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  • The spongy urethra is that part which is enclosed in the penis after piercing the anterior layer of the triangular ligament.

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  • Abies, Tsuga, Larix, &c., the mesophyll is heterogeneous, consisting of palisade and spongy parenchyma.

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  • The maxillopalatine plates (mxp) are dotted to show their spongy character.

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  • In order to make spongy or porous rubber, some material is incorporated which will give off gas or vapour at the vulcanizing temperature, - such as carbonate of ammonia, crystallized alum, and finely ground damp sawdust.

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