An illustrated encyclopædic medical dictionaryBeing a dictionary of the technical terms used by writers on medicine and the collateral sciences, in the Latin, English, French and German languages . Po^pu^l-iSn. From popuiiis, a poplar. Fr.,»o-puline. Ger., P. Benzoylsalicin; a substance, CsoHgaOg + SHgO =CiaHi7(CaHBCO)07 + 2H30, obtained from the bark, root, and leavesor Populus tremula and other varieties of poplar. It is recommend-ed in painful micturition. [B, 3, 270 (a, 38); Proc. of the Assoc, xxxiv, p. 644 (a, 50).] POPULUS (Lat.), n. f. PoJp(pop)u21(uM)-u3s(u*s). Fr., peup-Ite


An illustrated encyclopædic medical dictionaryBeing a dictionary of the technical terms used by writers on medicine and the collateral sciences, in the Latin, English, French and German languages . Po^pu^l-iSn. From popuiiis, a poplar. Fr.,»o-puline. Ger., P. Benzoylsalicin; a substance, CsoHgaOg + SHgO =CiaHi7(CaHBCO)07 + 2H30, obtained from the bark, root, and leavesor Populus tremula and other varieties of poplar. It is recommend-ed in painful micturition. [B, 3, 270 (a, 38); Proc. of the Assoc, xxxiv, p. 644 (a, 50).] POPULUS (Lat.), n. f. PoJp(pop)u21(uM)-u3s(u*s). Fr., peup-Iter. Ger., Pappel, Pappelbaum. 1. The poplar; a genus of theSalicinece. [B, 42, 121, 180 (a, 35).] 2. Of the Netherl. Ph., seeGemmcB populi.—Corte-x populi. See under P. alba.—Essentiapopull. See Tinctura populi.—Gemmse populi [Ger. Ph. (Isted.), O, no; O, not; 0», whole; Th, thin; Th^, the; U, Hke oo in too; U^, blue; U^, lull; V*, full; U^, urn; U^, like ii (German).331 PORCELAINEPORTION 2622 Belg. Ph.], Ocull popnii. Fr., pewpUer [Fr. Cod.]. The buds ofP. nigra or, according to the Qer. Ph. and Netherl. Ph., of othervarieties of P. [B, 95 (o, 38).]—P. alba. Fr., peupUer blanc de. POPULUS £A. [A, S37.] Hollande, obeau, obel^ ypreau, ipr^au. Ger., weisse Pappel, Sil-berpappel. 1. White poplar (or asp), abbey, abele-tree, Dutchbeech, silver (-leaved) poplar ; a species found in Europe and cen-tral Asia. The somewhat bitter astringent bark, cortex populi, wasformerly used in strangury and sciatica. It, as well as the leaves,contains salicin. The branches and bark contain a yellow leaves are said to be febrifuge. [B, 19, 168, 173, 180, 314 (o,).] 3. Of Willdenow, see P. canescens.—P. balsamifera. Fr.,peupUer-baumier (1st def.). Ger., Balsampappel (1st def.), Bal-samespe (1st def.). 1. Balsam (or tacamahac) poplar, the Hard ofthe (Canadians ; a species found in North America, Siberia, and theHimalayas. The buds contain a balsam resin which is considereda


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectmedicine, bookyear189