fabricated from the various grades of mineral fibres. (Vide Me Graw Hill Encyclopedia of Science and Technology, Vol.1 (1977) page 618). Most asbestos fibres ... that fail through the screens following the final fiberizer are discarded. (Vide Encyclopedia Americans Vol.11 (1970) pages 427, 428).
Similarly the Encyclopedia of Natural
Supreme Court Advocates-On-Record ... vs Union Of India on 6 October, 1993
Equivalent citations
reliance on
the meaning of the word 'industry' contained in
Encyclopedia of Britannica, which indeed is too wide and
submitted, the Court cannot
generally known in the commercial parlance, the High Court referred to the
Encyclopedia Britannica, Volume 6 (1972 edition) and concluded that
coffee is a beverage
material relied
upon by the High Court and also by referring to Encyclopedia
of Natural Chemical Analysis, Vol.II and Brussels
Nomenclature the bench
expression is "accessories thereof".
9. In Hamlyn All-Colour Science Encyclopedia the
"accumulators" are described as:
"The accumulator does ... different from accumulators or storage
cells.
12. In The New Encyclopedia Britannica, Vol.1, at page 963
, it is stated that,
"There
material relied
upon by the High Court and also by referring to Encyclopedia
of Natural Chemical Analysis, Vol.II and Brussels
Nomenclature the bench
rubber trees and plants'.
'Caoutchouc' is described in Encyclopedia Britannica as,
'the principal constituent of natural rubber and therefore
sometimes called ... become limited to the chemically pure form of the
substance'. In Encyclopedia of Social Sciences, Vol. XIII-
XIV it is described thus,
"Latex
reliance on
the meaning of the word 'industry' contained in
Encyclopedia of Britannica, which indeed is too wide and
submitted, the Court cannot
also means a substance used in refractories. It is,
according to the Encyclopedia Brittancia, 1980 Edition,
Macropaedia, Volume IV (quoted in the judgment ... form linings of
furnaces and ovens. Dealing with grog chemicals, the
Encyclopedia states that most refractories are produced in
the form of brick, bonded