What's the difference between sawdust and skillet?

Sawdust


Definition:

  • (n.) Dust or small fragments of wood (or of stone, etc.) made by the cutting of a saw.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) In 70% of cases the osseous adhesion is formed at the level of disks which demineralized osseous sawdust was introduced to (adhesion was formed, mainly, as perifocal osseous stratifications).
  • (2) In 4 series of experiments a dependence between 3,4-benzpyrene (BP) output and the temperature of fir sawdust pyrolysis under isothermic conditions has been investigated.
  • (3) Non-guinea pig-derived extracts such as the hay, sawdust and diet had negligible activity in skin testing and RAST inhibition; and preparations of Dermatophagoides pteronyssinus, house dust and rat dust did not inhibit the RAST for guinea pig room dust.
  • (4) In experiments carried out with beech sawdust treated with 0.1 M of sulphuric acid a digestibility of 3.7% was found, in sawdust treated with 0.47 M of nitric acid a digestibility of 61.6% was found and after a neutralization with ammonia it amounted to 72.2%.
  • (5) Sawdust from radiata pine trees which are grown extensively throughout South Australia causes various forms of contact dermatitis.
  • (6) Mixed cultures which contained sulfate-reducing bacteria reduced sulfate at pH 3.0 in the laboratory with sawdust as the only nutrient.
  • (7) An atopic patient with adult onset of asthma due to sawdust from redwood (Sequoia sempervirens) is described.
  • (8) Lesions to 30 brain sites produced deficient performance on the sawdust-digging problem.
  • (9) On each day, after the assessment of spirometry and PC20, subjects underwent exposure to sawdust or sham exposure.
  • (10) Two patients with occupational asthma due to California redwood (Sequoia sempervirens) sawdust are described.
  • (11) On Saturday morning, blood still stained the street outside despite police attempt to to cover it with sawdust.
  • (12) A dual asthmatic reaction was induced during the following days by exposing the subject to red-cedar sawdust for 30 minutes and plicatic acid for 7 minutes.
  • (13) Total time required for larval and pupal development in Ephestia kühniella Z. was significantly modified when habitable space of the food mass was increased by dilution with a nontoxic sawdust.
  • (14) sawdust plus chicken dung proved an excellent breeding medium.
  • (15) Formation of extracellular xylanase was studied in 10 strains of wood-destroying fungi belonging to Basidiomycetes during their submerged cultivation with willow sawdust.
  • (16) An experiment was treated to investigate the effects of an extract of conditioned beech sawdust (80% methanol extraction) on the in vitro digestion of cellulose and on the digestion of hay and wheat bran diet (80 to 20%) in a artificial rumen (Rusitec).
  • (17) The experiments were confined to the effects of the addition of different sources of carbon (glucose, wheat straw, and sawdust) on the microbial activities in soils: loamy sand, loam and saline clay were used.
  • (18) Stimuli provided were intrabronchially injected purified protein derivative in sensitized rats and dust inhaled from sawdust used as bedding in the cages.
  • (19) Both intrabronchially injected purified protein derivative and stimuli inhaled from sawdust were found to aggravate lung allograft rejection, thus shortening mean graft survival from 32 to 11 days.
  • (20) Wethers were fed complete granular feed rations including 41.81% of grass hay, 25.28% of barley, 15.37% of sawdust, 14.98% of molasses, 1.32% of urea, and 1.24% of mineral supplement in dry matter for 24 weeks.

Skillet


Definition:

  • (n.) A small vessel of iron, copper, or other metal, with a handle, used for culinary purpose, as for stewing meat.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The skillet cake recipe comes from Annie Evans, Ann's "Welsh grandmother".
  • (2) To flipthe okonomiyaki, slide it out of the skillet on to a plate.
  • (3) In the next chapter – Welsh Heritage – Ann shares her recipe for skillet cakes, all while continuing to write like an over-excited Sunday school teacher ("How grateful I am for the courage and sacrifice of my grandparents!").
  • (4) Also, three foods were cooked in two iron skillets.
  • (5) Compounds mutagenic toward Salmonella typhimurium strain TA98 in the presence of rat-liver homogenates (S9) were formed when fish flesh was fried at 199 degrees C. Three species of Hawaiian fish commonly consumed in Hawaii (skipjack tuna, Katsuwonus pelamis; yellowfin tuna, Neothunnus macropterus; and milkfish, Chanos chanos) were cooked in an electric skillet, along with samples of sole (Microstomus pacificus).
  • (6) Differences in volatile N-nitrosamines (NNAs) found in nitrite-cured bacon cooked in an electric skillet and a microwave oven were determined.
  • (7) They conjure up the skillet on the open fire; will‑o'‑the-wisps over a pitch black bog; the purple heath.
  • (8) If you need a bit more oil in your skillet, add it now, then slide the okonomiyaki back into the skillet.
  • (9) Perhaps because of differing amounts of previous use, cooking in different iron skillets resulted in some variation in the iron content of food.
  • (10) This finds expression in Graveola 's uniquely skewed indie aesthetic, using flutes, skillets and even musical Christmas cards to create a cosmopolitan sound.
  • (11) Pasta-makers, steamers, woks, griddle pans, copper pots, juicers, egg timers, skillets, multi-mixes, palette knives, frothers, basters and thermometers gathering dust in countless attics.
  • (12) You perch on stools round a central bar where cool, beautiful people knock up punchy cocktails and deliver food that’s perfect for the late-night reveller: sliders, delicate pizzette, perhaps the capital’s finest, fromage-iest macaroni cheese, oozing and bubbling in its cast iron skillet and laced with at least three different cheeses.
  • (13) In a dry skillet over medium heat, toast the sesame seeds, stirring nearly constantly, until golden, about 5 minutes.

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