Definitions

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Examples

  • Pharmaceuticals Inc. Dextrin sulphate has received approval for clinical trials from the Medicines Control Agency in Britain and PRO2000 gel from the

    ANC Daily News Briefing 2002

  • Dextrin -- Bindeispoevxtrin is a type of starch that is added to many firework mixtures to hold the composition togetherthert the most commonly used bindei in pyrotechnics.

    Terror in Argentina Rosenblum, Mort 1976

  • Dextrin is found in small amounts in the crust of bread and in toast.

    School and Home Cooking Carlotta Cherryholmes Greer

  • Dextrin gives a purple (reddish blue) color when treated with iodine.

    School and Home Cooking Carlotta Cherryholmes Greer

  • He spent some eighteen months in Paris and returned to receive his degree in medicine at the University of Pennsylvania in 1840, with a graduation thesis on "The Starch and Dextrin Bandage", the technic of which he had learned in Paris.

    The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 15: Tournely-Zwirner 1840-1916 1913

  • Dextrin mixed while warm with burnt alum and alcohol cools and solidifies into a stony consistency, and is preferable to plaster of Paris, which is less friable and has less solidity, besides being heavier and requiring constant additions as it becomes older.

    Special Report on Diseases of the Horse Charles B. Michener 1877

  • My star composition is: Ammonium perchlorate - 70 Charcoal - 15 Sulfur - 8 Copper (II) chloride - 7 Dextrin - +5

    WN.com - Financial News 2010

  • Dextrin, an incompletely hydrolyzed starch that may be derived from the dry heating of corn, potato, rice, tapioca, arrowroot, or wheat.

    The World's Healthiest Foods 2009

  • Dextrin, an incompletely hydrolyzed starch that may be derived from the dry heating of corn, potato, rice, tapioca, arrowroot, or wheat.

    The World's Healthiest Foods 2009

  • Dextrin, an incompletely hydrolyzed starch that may be derived from the dry heating of corn, potato, rice, tapioca, arrowroot, or wheat.

    The World's Healthiest Foods 2009

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