Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
Nova was going to say she meant the gum resin, not the crystal, but decided against it.
Myrrh is also a gum resin used in making incense.
The gum resin is used for incense.
But this play on frankincense, an aromatic gum resin used in religious ceremonies, has not caught on.
The tree's gum resin, for which the tree is named, exudes from the bark of the tree when wounded.
Stir in the turmeric and, if using, the asafetida (a powdered gum resin).
Traditional varnishes use natural gum resins, like damar, which is obtained from conifer trees.
Plant oils and the soot from various nuts, seeds, and gum resins are often added to the carbon powder.
Most beeswax is yellow because it is contaminated with pollen and the gum resins that bees collect.
Effects of Boswellia serrata gum resin in patients with ulcerative colitis.
Other resinous products in their natural condition are a mix with gum or mucilaginous substances and known as gum resins.
A vicid gum resin flows from the involucre.
The most popular buy is frankincense from the harvested gum resin of trees in Dhofar, Oman.
I buy gum resin, methyl salicylate and benz-aldehyde.
Guggulipid: Guggulipid is the gum resin of the mukul myrrh tree.
Effects of Boswellia serrata gum resin in patients with bronchial asthma: results of a double-blind, placebo-controlled, 6-week clinical study.
Guggul is made from the sap (gum resin) of the Commiphora mukul tree, which is native to India.
Today guggul gum resin is used for arthritis, lowering high cholesterol, "hardening of the arteries" (atherosclerosis), acne and other skin diseases, and weight loss.
The oleo gum resins of a number of other Commiphora species are also used as perfumes, medicines (such as aromatic wound dressings), and incense ingredients.
(IODINE) Yogaraj Guggul Gum Resin.
For instance, in the expression "'Opopanax' is hard to spell", what is referred to is the word itself ("opopanax") and not what it means (an obscure gum resin).
The Illustrated Dictionary of the Bible plainly defines onycha as the "gum resin obtained from . . . the rockrose, also known as labdanum.
When mixed with gum, they form the gum resins, like asafetida and gamboge; mixed with essential oils, they frorm balsams, or oleoresins.
Ginger powder is also used in certain food preparations, particularly for pregnant or nursing women, the most popular one being katlu which is a mixture of gum resin, ghee, nuts, and sugar.
This spice is made up of gum resins obtained from Indian and Iranian plants and is sold in Indian stores in powdered or lump form (the latter lasts much longer).