A Dictionary of the Economic Products of India: Linum to OysterSuperintendent of Government Printing, 1891 |
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Page 3
... fact , all that can be said regarding the history of flax and linseed . It may not , therefore , be out of place to give here some of DeCandolle's more recent observations ( Origin . Cult . Pl . ) : “ The first important work on this ...
... fact , all that can be said regarding the history of flax and linseed . It may not , therefore , be out of place to give here some of DeCandolle's more recent observations ( Origin . Cult . Pl . ) : “ The first important work on this ...
Page 4
... fact that in Scandinavian countries and in Finland , terms have been used which differ from those employed throughout the south of Europe . This variety shows the antiquity of the cultivation , and agrees with the fact that the lake ...
... fact that in Scandinavian countries and in Finland , terms have been used which differ from those employed throughout the south of Europe . This variety shows the antiquity of the cultivation , and agrees with the fact that the lake ...
Page 6
... fact , on the subject of flax which the writer has been able to consult , is that written by the late Revd . W. Carey , which appeared early in the present century . The correspondence of the Hon'ble the East India Company is of course ...
... fact , on the subject of flax which the writer has been able to consult , is that written by the late Revd . W. Carey , which appeared early in the present century . The correspondence of the Hon'ble the East India Company is of course ...
Page 7
... fact , could hardly be said to have been Indian agricultural products . Buchanan - Hamilton , in his account of the Kingdom of Nepál , deals with the crops grown there in his time ( 1819 ) , but makes no mention of Linseed . And what is ...
... fact , could hardly be said to have been Indian agricultural products . Buchanan - Hamilton , in his account of the Kingdom of Nepál , deals with the crops grown there in his time ( 1819 ) , but makes no mention of Linseed . And what is ...
Page 13
... fact worthless for manu- facturing purposes . The bushiness arose from the practice of the natives , who grow several plants , as you are aware , at once , in the same field . The Flax plants were consequently planted too far apart for ...
... fact worthless for manu- facturing purposes . The bushiness arose from the practice of the natives , who grow several plants , as you are aware , at once , in the same field . The Flax plants were consequently planted too far apart for ...
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Common terms and phrases
acid acre Agricultural Ainslie áman anthelmintic Assam bark BENG Bengal bigha boiled Bomb Bombay broadcast BURM Burma cake Calcutta cattle cent Ceylon Chittagong cigars colour crop curing district dried Drugs Dymock eaten employed European exports feet fermentation fibre field flavour flax flowers fodder fruit Gamble given grain grown Habitat Habitat.-A Himálaya HIND husk important inches India irrigation juice land leaf leaves LEPCHA Linn linseed LINUM usitatissimum Madras manure maunds MEDICINE Mysore Nagpur native NEPAL NICOTIANA NICOTIANA Tabacum obtained Orissa ORYZA sativa Oudh paddy Panjab Patna Pharm plant ploughed prepared produce Provinces quantity rain rayats reaped References.-Roxb rice cultivation root Roxb Royle samples Sanskrit season seed seers soil sowing sown species Sundarbans Surgeon Tabacum Timb tion tobacco trade transplanted tree varieties Watt weeds wild writers yield
Popular passages
Page 208 - Wallich states that almost every article of household furniture intended to contain either solid or liquid food is lacquered by means of it The process consists in first coating the article with a layer of pounded calcined bones, after which the varnish is laid on thinly, either in its pure state or variously coloured. The most difficult part consists in the drying. It...
Page 213 - Absolute alcohol agitated with it was coloured greenish ; on separating the alcohol, and evaporating off the spirit, an extract was obtained which consisted of oil, from which a small residue, whitish in colour, separated on standing. The alcoholic extract was very bitter, and possessed in a marked degree the peculiar odour of the oil. The whitish residue deposited from the oil separated by alcohol, and examined microscopically, did not appear crystalline. Margosa oil after repeated agitation with...
Page 291 - If, however, later research should prove that the banana existed 'in some parts of America, before the advent of the Europeans, I should be inclined to attribute it to a chance introduction, not very ancient, the effect of some unknown communication with the islands of the Pacific or with the coast of Guinea, rather than to believe in the primitive and simultaneous existence of the species in both hemispheres. The whole of geographical botany renders the latter hypothesis improbable, I might almost...
Page 361 - In Bijapur I had found some tobacco. Never having seen the like in India, I brought some with me, and prepared a handsome pipe of jewel work. The stem, the finest to be procured at Achin, was three cubits in length, beautifully dried and coloured, both ends being adorned with jewels and enamel. I happened to come across a very handsome mouthpiece of Yaman cornelian, oval-shaped, which I set to the stem ; the whole was very handsome. There...
Page 208 - I was told, to the poverty of the soil, and partly also to the circumstance of there being none of the people in that part whose business it is to perform the process. This latter is very simple : short joints of a thin sort of bamboo, sharpened at one end like a...
Page 156 - Bai (see Cox, Myth, of the Arian Nations) the daughter of the sun is represented as persecuted by a sorceress, to escape from whom she became a golden Lotus. The king fell in love with the flower, which was then burnt by the sorceress. From its ashes grew a mango tree, and the king fell in love first with its flower, and then with its fruit ; when ripe the fruit fell to the ground, and from it emerged the daughter of the sun (Surya Bai), who was recognized by the prince as his long lost wife.
Page 551 - ... to hold large areas under cultivation ; and thus, what with resident large cultivating rayats and non-resident rayats, we do not find in the Sundarban tracts a population at all equal to what the amount of cultivation would lead us to expect. There is another thing to be noticed with reference to the dwellers in these regions, — namely, that they do not tend, as in other places, to group themselves into villages.
Page 362 - His Majesty looked at it, and ordered me to prepare and take him a pipeful. He began to smoke it, when his physician approached and forbade his doing so. But his Majesty was graciously pleased to say...
Page 229 - Menthol occurs as colorless, acicular or prismatic crystals, having a strong and pure odor of peppermint and a warm, aromatic taste, followed by a sensation of cold when air is drawn into the mouth.
Page 222 - The juice of the leaves administered internally is said to be anthclmintic, antilithic, diuretic, aud emmenagogue, and is thought to resolve cold swellings, and expel the humours which give rise to them. The bark and leaves are used internally and externally in leprosy and scrofula.