Citations:myrrhic

Adjective: "of, related to, or derived from myrrh"

 * 1866 — Leopold Gmelin, Hand-Book of Chemistry, Volume XVII, Harrison and Sons (1866), page 426:
 * The transparent red-brown residue, Ruickholdt's myrrhic acid, is acid, nearly insoluble in caustic potash, but soluble in alcohol and ether

Adjective: "having a pleasant fragrance; aromatic"

 * 1888 — Amanda Elizabeth Dennis, "The Phoenix", Asphodels and Pansies, J. B. Lippincott & Company (1888):
 * "In a nest of myrrhic incense
 * He awaits his coming doom,
 * While the funereal flames creep closer
 * With their sweet but hot perfume,
 * Till golden plume and pinion
 * Are caught beneath their sway,
 * And the nest of myrrh and spices,
 * Is naught but ashes gray.
 * 1916 — Witter Bynner (as Emanuel Morgan), "Opus 45", Spectra, Mitchel Kennerley (1916):
 * All the fragrances of dew, O angel, are there,
 * The myrrhic rapture of young hair,
 * 1980 — Gene Wolfe, The Shadow of the Torturer, Simon and Schuster (1980), ISBN 9780671253257, page 217:
 * Above us the avern brooded like a gonfalon; from it there drifted a myrrhic perfume.
 * 1997 — Clive Barker, Sacrament, HarperCollins (1997), ISBN 9780061091995, page 177:
 * Ambrosial, myrrhic, mephitic. He'd divided the smells up, so he had a name for every one: putrid, musky, balsamic.
 * 2006 — John Mole, It's All Greek to Me!: A Tale of a Mad Dog and an Englishman, Ruins, Restina - and Real Greeks, Nicholas Brealey Publishing (2006), ISBN 9781857883756, page 316:
 * It reverberates with layer on layer of flavour and aroma, from springtime zephyr at the top of the register to a myrrhic basso profundo.
 * 2007 — Ernest W. Hanisch, Running Rain, Vantage Press, Inc. (2007), ISBN 9780533154876, pages 32-33:
 * Out of the forests drift the myrrhic scent of gum resin. On the warm wind there is the smell of a faraway forest fire. And then there is the all-pervading perfume of dry grass.