First Book in Physiology: For the Use of Schools and Families. Intended as Introductory to the Larger Work by the Same AuthorSheldon and Company, publishers, 1872 - 191 pages |
From inside the book
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Page
... carry analysis and syntax along to- gether . The exercises are unusually full and complete , while the parsing - book furnishes , in a convenient form , at slight expense , a great variety of extra drill . The books deserve the success ...
... carry analysis and syntax along to- gether . The exercises are unusually full and complete , while the parsing - book furnishes , in a convenient form , at slight expense , a great variety of extra drill . The books deserve the success ...
Page 10
... carried everywhere . There is a wonderful set of machinery to do this . The heart is pumping night and day , sending out the blood through the pipes that branch out from it all over the body . 6. Then the blood , when it has been used ...
... carried everywhere . There is a wonderful set of machinery to do this . The heart is pumping night and day , sending out the blood through the pipes that branch out from it all over the body . 6. Then the blood , when it has been used ...
Page 32
... carried every- where to nourish the body . 20. In Fig . 14 you see all the complicated apparatus or machinery of digestion , except its mill or grinding part where the process begins . The parts are not closely packed together as they ...
... carried every- where to nourish the body . 20. In Fig . 14 you see all the complicated apparatus or machinery of digestion , except its mill or grinding part where the process begins . The parts are not closely packed together as they ...
Page 44
... carried back from them to the heart . 19. As the blood comes from the heart by the arte- ries it has a bright red color . But when it passes from the capillaries into the veins it has a dark color . The cause of this change is the use ...
... carried back from them to the heart . 19. As the blood comes from the heart by the arte- ries it has a bright red color . But when it passes from the capillaries into the veins it has a dark color . The cause of this change is the use ...
Page 75
... carry the blood to them , and the heart that pumps it into them , are made from the blood that they contain . This is not less wonderful than it would be to have the pipes of an aqueduct made out of the water that is in them . From what ...
... carry the blood to them , and the heart that pumps it into them , are made from the blood that they contain . This is not less wonderful than it would be to have the pipes of an aqueduct made out of the water that is in them . From what ...
Other editions - View all
First Book in Physiology: For the Use of Schools and Families. Intended as ... Worthington Hooker No preview available - 2016 |
First Book in Physiology: For the Use of Schools and Families, Intended as ... Worthington 1806-1867 Hooker No preview available - 2021 |
First Book in Physiology: For the Use of Schools and Families, Intended as ... Worthington Hooker No preview available - 2017 |
Common terms and phrases
acid gas air-cells animals apparatus arteries auricle bellows body brain breast-bone breathing building BULLIONS'S called capillaries carbonic acid carbonic acid gas cavity chain of bones changed chapter chest chyle chyme circulation cles comes concert of action contracts cords daguerreotyping dark blood drum duct elbow-joint fastened feel fibres fingers fluid foot formative vessels front gall-bladder glands goes GRAMMAR grinding hand head hearing heart hinge-joint images instrument intestines joint kinds larynx ligaments liver look lungs membrane messages mind motion mouth muscles act muscles that move nerves nervous oesophagus organs oxygen parietal bones particles pass Physiology pull red blood repairing represented in Fig respiration retina right auricle sent serous membrane shape shoulder-joint side skin socket sound spinal column stomach structures substance tear-gland tears teeth tendons thing tion tube ulna valves variety veins ventricle vertebræ vibration winding passages windpipe
Popular passages
Page 112 - BO many different bones, instead of being one solid, tight box. If a blow be received on the head, these bones give a little upon each other, as it is expressed, and so they are not often broken. They give more in the child than in the adult, because, besides being less brittle, they are less tightly put together. It is well that it is so ; for if it were not, the skull would often be fractured, in the frequent falls which the child has. 9. The bones on the top of the head are fastened together by...