Citations:stœchiological

Adjective:

 * 1840, M. B. Studer quoted in The Edinburgh new Philosophical Journal, Volume XXIX., page #302:
 * In this stœchiological convulsion of rocks, it may well be supposed there is a much greater increase of volume than in one which is merely mechanical ; and in this, perhaps, we find the cause of the very marked extent of the mica‐slate and gneiss formations,—the great height to which they rise,—their including the neighbouring limestones, and also the dislocation of these latter over the molasse.
 * 1875, John Francis Churchill, Consumption and Tuberculosis, Longmans, Green, and Co.; Chapter IV, page #49:
 * All the other symptoms, such as cough and expectoration, &c., which depend upon the local lesion, are evidently influenced by the condition of the lung itself, and this is now, since my discovery of the stœchiological inhalants, as amenable to treatment as any external non‐specific wound or ulceration.
 * 1884, J. Burdon Sanderson, A Handbook for the Physiological Laboratory, P. Blakiston, Son & Co.; Chapter XV., page #179:
 * The ending in is adopted here and elsewhere to denote that the word is used in a stœchiological sense.