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Word: vaporous (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...perhaps two hours winding of the horn, the player will have to pour nearly a glass of water out of its coils and crooks. This is not spit. Shame on you! The horn acts as a still. The breath of the performer (and your breath) is a watery vapor. Remember the mist it makes when blown on a cold window pane? The coils of the horn distill out most of this water. . . . All wind instrument players (except organists and operators of the concertina) suffer from this horrible inconvenience but they do not drool while they play. Shame...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters, Dec. 4, 1939 | 12/4/1939 | See Source »

...Before me, filling the East and the South of East, there lay a latitude of fog, a world of it, and out of the expanse of vapor there shone a glare this side of the sun, now rising in obscurity; and from the region of this singular light came the crying of the waters...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Grand Banks Romance | 11/27/1939 | See Source »

...bland orange-yellow of sodium-vapor lamps now lights hundreds of miles of U. S. highway. Until recently it has been a ticklish and costly job to get the sodium into the highly evacuated lamps without contamination. Last week General Electric Co.'s laboratories at Schenectady announced a clever new way of filling the bulbs. The sodium is packaged in tiny, frail glass capsules, a capsule placed inside each lamp, the lamp pumped out and sealed. Then short radio waves are turned on the capsule. It heats up, explodes. The sodium is thus freed inside the lamp...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Lamp Trick | 4/10/1939 | See Source »

Godwin and Walker obtain their very bright, very brief flash by discharging 38,000 volts through a vacuum tube filled with mercury vapor at one-twentieth of atmospheric pressure. The voltage source is an X-ray apparatus and the current is stored in a 20-unit Leyden jar condenser...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Quick as a Flash | 1/23/1939 | See Source »

...announced her discovery last week, Drs. C. Hawley Cartwright and Arthur Francis Turner of Massachusetts Institute of Technology reported at a physics meeting in Washington that they had also produced invisible glass, using a similar principle. Their reflection-absorbing varnish, however, is deposited on the glass by condensing the vapor of metallic fluorides...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: New Inventions | 1/9/1939 | See Source »

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