| 1864 - 332 pages
...compounds may confine himself without much loss to the generally-recognised modes of research, it is to hi- cost that the organic chemist, especially one who...; but when such substances do present themselves, their optical characters afford facilities for their chemical study of which chemists generally have... | |
| 1864 - 654 pages
...chemist, especially one who occupies himself with proximate analysis, neglects the immense assist-- anee which in many cases would be afforded him by optical...substances possess no marked optical characters ; but when sucli substances do present themselves, their optical characters afford facilities for their chemical... | |
| George Gabriel Stokes - 1904 - 391 pages
...who attends to inorganic compounds may confine himself without much loss to the generally recognized modes of research, it is to his cost that the organic...characters; but when such substances do present themselves, their optical characters afford facilities for their chemical study of which chemists generally have... | |
| Royal Institution of Great Britain - 1866 - 742 pages
...who attends to inorganic compounds may confine himself without much loss to the generally-recognized modes of research, it is to his cost that the organic...substances possess no marked optical characters ; but when sucli substances do present themĀ«*lves, their optical characters afford facilities for their chemical... | |
| 1864 - 1214 pages
...who attends to inorganic compounds may confine himself without much loss to the generally-recognized modes of research, it is to his cost that the organic...characters; but when such substances do present themselves, their optical characters afford facilities for their chemical study of which chemists generally have... | |
| 1864 - 1632 pages
...who attends to inorganic compounds may confine himself without much loss to the generally-recognized modes of research, it is to his cost that the organic...; but when such substances do present themselves, their optical characters afford facilities for their chemical study of which chemists generally have... | |
| 1865 - 786 pages
...who attends to inorganic compounds may confine himself without much loss to the generally-recognized modes of research, it is to his cost that the organic...neglects the immense assistance which in many cases might be afforded him by optical examination of the substances under his hands. It is true that the... | |
| |