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GOULD'S

Pocket Medical Dictionary.

NEW EDITION NOW READY.

21,000 MEDICAL WORDS

Pronounced and Defined.

A Student's Pronouncing Medical Lexicon. Containing all the Words, their Definition and Pronunciation, that the Student generally comes in contact with; also elaborate Tables of the Arteries, Muscles, Nerves, Bacilli, etc., etc.; a Dose List in both English and Metric System, etc., arranged in a most convenient form for reference and memorizing. Thin 64mo. 537 pages. Flexible Morocco, net, $1.00; Thumb Index, net, $1.25.

From The New York Medical Record.

"This is a handy little volume of medical terms, convenient in shape and size and printed in clear type, which will doubtless be found extremely useful by students for class-room reference. A commendable feature is the insertion of tables of the arteries, muscles, nerves, micro-organisms, a comparison of the Centigrade, Reaumur, and Fahrenheit thermometric scales, and a list of drugs with their doses according to both the English and metric systems."

From The Pacific Medical Record.

"Just the book to have lying on one's table, light and compact, and replete with the innumerable terms of modern medical literature. Its anatomical tables are the neatest published, and contain, in a very compact space, facts of ever recurring importance, which in a moment in this book can be found, that which would require much time and patience to find elsewhere. Students of Modern Bacteriology cannot afford to be without this work, and the general practitioner needs it."

From The Dental Cosmos, Philadelphia.

6.

· By reason of the large number of words which it contains, the clearness and exactness of its definitions, its convenient form and small compass, which latter has been in no way secured by a sacrifice of typographical clearness, we regard this as altogether the best elementary word-book designed for the pocket, and the ready reference of medical and dental practitioners, that we have yet seen. The words included in it are those which are in general use at the present time, embracing all the later editions to medical nomenclature.” From The British Medical Journal, London.

"The definitions are short, but we have not noticed an instance in which accuracy has been sacrificed to brevity. Obsolete words appear to have been generally omitted, which is right in a dictionary intended for every-day use; in this way room has been found for many new words, and the 21,000 which the volume contains appear, so far as our tests have gone, to include nearly every word likely to be met with in current medical literature."

P. BLAKISTON'S SON & CO., Medical Publishers,

1012 Walnut Street, Philadelphia.

THE

LATIN GRAMMAR

OF

PHARMACY AND MEDICINE

BY

D. H. ROBINSON, PH. D.

DEAN OF SCHOOL OF ARTS, AND PROFESSOR OF LATIN LANGUAGE AND
LITERATURE, UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS.

WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY

L. E. SAYRE, PH. G.

PROFESSOR OF PHARMACY IN, AND DEAN OF, DEPARTMENT OF
PHARMACY, UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS

THIRD EDITION, REVISED, WITH ELABORATE VOCABULARIES

PHILADELPHIA

P. BLAKISTON'S SON & CO.

No. 1012 WALNUT STREET

Copyright, 1893, by

P. BLAKISTON, SON & CO

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