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Examples

  • Tertio quòd propter eius amaritudinem terra adiacens littori nil viride profert.

    The Voyages and Travels of Sir John Mandeville 2004

  • Tertio qu騞 propter eius amaritudinem terra adiacens littori nil viride profert.

    The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation 2003

  • The Japanese are producing cellulose commercially from J. viride on a limited scale using the Koji process, and considerable research is being done in several laboratories to obtain mutants that yield more enzyme.

    Chapter 5 1979

  • Cellulolytic fungi (Trichoderma viride, basidiomycetes) have been employed with commercial amylases to enhance the saccharification of cassava starch; the hydrolysate served as a better substrate for the alcoholic fermentation by yeast

    Chapter 5 1979

  • Trichodenma viride Cellulases for converting cellulose to sugars, animal feed

    Chapter 5 1979

  • Trichoderma viride and a number of its mutants do produce a stable cellulose that is capable of degrading cellulose (Figure 3).

    Chapter 5 1979

  • Cellulolytic enzymes are found widely scattered among the major taxonomic groups, but only in the higher fungi are they a feature of the group as a whole (20) This is one of the reasons why it has been studied in detail in Sporotrichum pulverulentum (21), Trichoderma viride (22), Trichoderma koningii

    Chapter 8 1979

  • In fact, Casas-Campillo and colleagues (personal communication, 1978) have found that C. flavigena and X. campestris together are much more active against cellulose than are T. viride or combinations of other organisms.

    Chapter 5 1979

  • _S. _ nitida, nigra; abdomine prismatico, alis fuscis viride et violaceo micantibus.

    Journal of the Proceedings of the Linnean Society - Vol. 3 Zoology Various

  • As a rule, the fistula is dilated by a tent of alder-pith, mandragora, briony or gentian, the lining membrane destroyed by an ointment of quick-lime or even the actual cautery, and the wound then dressed with egg-albumen followed by the _unguentum viride_.

    Gilbertus Anglicus Medicine of the Thirteenth Century Henry Ebenezer Handerson

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