| Stomach |
| Fatty ____ |
| Corrosives |
| RNA and DNA |
| Sour things |
| Lab hazards |
| Lab bottles |
| Amino et al. |
| Aminos, e.g. |
| Lab liquids |
| Metal eaters |
| Eating things |
| Rust removers |
| Tums' targets |
| Vinegar, etc. |
| Lab chemicals |
| Pool supplies |
| Base balancers |
| Etching agents |
| H2SO4 and such |
| Etching supply |
| HCl and others |
| Lab assortment |
| Low pH liquids |
| Omega-3s, e.g. |
| Durer supplies |
| Battery fluids |
| Chem lab array |
| Etchers' needs |
| Some are fatty |
| Etching fluids |
| Sour compounds |
| Etcher's supply |
| Amino and boric |
| Boric and amino |
| Lab collections |
| Tummy troublers |
| Tummy upsetters |
| Some corrosives |
| Etchers' fluids |
| Caustic liquids |
| Sour substances |
| Oxalic and oleic |
| Amino and others |
| Chem lab hazards |
| Chem-lab liquids |
| Citric and boric |
| Digestive juices |
| Etcher's etchers |
| Folic and formic |
| Formic and folic |
| Heartburn causes |
| Stomach churners |
| Etchers use them |
| Low-pH chemicals |
| Low-pH compounds |
| Stomach contents |
| Bases' opposites |
| Corrosive agents |
| Etching supplies |
| Boric and citric |
| Corrosive fluids |
| Litmus reddeners |
| Base counterparts |
| Citric and others |
| Etchers' supplies |
| Etching materials |
| Etching solutions |
| Low pH substances |
| Niacin and others |
| Acetic and nitric |
| Bases' antitheses |
| Base neutralizers |
| Etcher's purchase |
| Corrosive liquids |
| The Amino ___ Song |
| Alkalis' opposites |
| Boric and carbolic |
| Carbolic and amino |
| Lab-bottle fillers |
| Reactors to litmus |
| They have low pH's |
| They redden litmus |
| Vinegar and others |
| Etchers' purchases |
| Bases' neutralizers |
| Chem lab collection |
| Chem lab substances |
| Chemistry lab stock |
| Corrosive materials |
| Hazardous compounds |
| Lab-bottle contents |
| These can be citric |
| Corosive substances |
| Chemistry lab array |
| Bases' counterparts |
| Alkali neutralizers |
| Corrosive compounds |
| Corrosive chemicals |
| Amino and tannic ___ |
| Chemistry lab fluids |
| Chemistry lab supply |
| Chemists' substances |
| Niacin and vitamin C |
| Causes of breakdowns |
| They turn litmus red |
| Gastric juices, e.g. |
| Corrosive substances |
| Boric and prussic ___ |
| Chemical-burn causers |
| Litmus test materials |
| They have pHs below 7 |
| Some corrosive liquids |
| Substances with low pH |
| Sulphuric and muriatic |
| Vinegar and lime juice |
| Hydrochloric and boric |
| Acetic and nitric, e.g. |
| Contents of some flasks |
| Hydrochloric and others |
| One end of the pH scale |
| Heartburn causes, maybe |
| Ascorbic and boric e.g. |
| Gastric juice components |
| One side of the pH scale |
| They're not basic things |
| They may cause breakdowns |
| Wake Up! Here Come the ___ |
| Substances used by etchers |
| They turn litmus paper red |
| Amino ___ (metabolic group) |
| Lab flask contents, perhaps |
| They have pH's of less than 7 |
| They're used in mineral processing |
| Cause of stomach problems, sometimes |
| Fluids that can cause chemical burns |
| Stomach foes of hard partying rockers |
| Compounds in vinegar and car batteries |
| Lemon juice and coffee, on the pH scale |
| Amino ___ (building blocks of proteins) |
| Counterparts of tannins, in wine tasting |