Library of Formatting Examples:Italics/24A
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<i>Gramme-Molecule.</i>--A gramme-molecule is the molecular weight of a body expressed in grammes. Occasionally for brevity a gramme-molecule is spoken of as a "molecule." Thus we may say that the molecular weight of oxygen is 16 grammes, meaning thereby that there are the same number of molecules in 16 grammes of oxygen as there are atoms in 1 gramme of hydrogen. <i>Concentration.</i>--The concentration of a solution is the ratio between the quantity of the solute and the quantity of the solvent. The concentration of a solution is expressed in various ways. (<i>a</i>) The weight of solute dissolved in 100 grammes of the solvent. (<i>b</i>) The weight of solute present in 100 grammes of the solution. (<i>c</i>) The weight of solute dissolved in a litre of the solvent. (<i>d</i>) The weight of solute in a litre of the solution. The most usual method is to [Footnote 1: <i>Turkey</i>, 3, 1876, No. 1.]
Complete sentences
Each italicized term is a "complete sentence", so their periods go inside. The em-dashes go outside. In the second paragraph, parentheses go outside: only their contents is italicized ... even if they'd been printed in italics.
