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sublimed s. [USP]  a form obtained by subliming elemental sulfur and condensing the vapor. It has been used topically as a scabicide and parasiticide. Called also flowers of s.
Ãâó: www.mercksource.com/pp/us/cns/cns_health_library.j...
sublime Sublimation occurs when a substance changes directly from a solid to a gas without becoming liquid.
Ãâó: www.pgd.hawaii.edu/eschool/glossary.htm
sublime ??n literature, a quality attributed to lofty or noble ideas, grand or elevated expression, or language?(Holman 448).?A term characterized by ?obility and grandeur, impressive, exalted, raised above ordinary qualities?(Hough and Harmon 461).?The sublime may be considered a thing of spirit rather than a product of technique (Hough and Harmon 461).
Ãâó: english.montclair.edu/isaacs/605LitResearch/literm...
sublime things happen in an universe that is totally indifferent regarding our worries about life and death.
Ãâó: www.a-studio.nl/en/writings/abc/
sublime A habit of appreciating nature as beyond human control, immense, powerful, awe-inspiring. Associated with mountains, cataracts, the ocean, stars. The standard sources are Longinus, On the Sublime, and Edmund Burke, A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of Our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful, 1757.
Ãâó: alpha.fdu.edu/~jbecker/nature/natureglossary.html
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