Dictionary
vial
noun
A glass vessel or bottle, especially a small tube-shaped bottle used to store medicine, perfume or other chemical.
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'vial' is a correct and usable word in written English.
You can use it when referring to a small container or bottle, especially used for medicinal purposes. Example: The nurse prepared a vial of the patient's medication.
Exact(60)
It is a prerequisite of my tailoring that there is a little side pocket that can contain a vial of gin.
Dr Gauthier's results, by contrast, were so clear-cut that portions of the laser pulse appeared to leave the vial before they entered it.There is, however, no cause for alarm.
Parts of a light wave can be accelerated beyond this speed by passing the wave through a vial of energetic potassium atoms.
This is placed into a vial containing a liquid, which washes the sample into solution.
The assassin would have been able to carry the toxin in a glass bottle knowing that its radioactivity would be readily absorbed by the vial itself.
Catching addicts is easy: if the police frisk enough people in druggy areas, they are sure to find a crack vial or two.Snaring dealers is harder.
The vial will be broken if a certain atom undergoes a radioactive decay.
(Full disclosure: your correspondent paid to send a small vial of her father's ashes on Genesis II, a Bigelow inflatable spacecraft that as I write is currently orbiting just north of me in Canada).
So, rather than saying as Einstein did that nothing can be faster than the speed of light in a vacuum (abbreviated as c), physicists now prefer a more precise version: information cannot travel faster than c.Dr Gauthier began his experiment with a vial of gaseous potassium and a laser.
The vial is then fitted into the iTest device, which in turn is plugged into a phone.
The material in the vial is called methylammonium lead iodide, and enthusiasts such as Dr Case believe it, and materials like it known collectively as perovskites could lead to a dramatic increase in the world's use of power from the sun.Oxford Photovoltaics is one of many firms, both small and large, that see promise in perovskites.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com