释义 |
introsusception|ˌɪntrəʊsəˈsɛpʃən| [f. intro- + L. susceptiōn-em a taking, susception, f. suscipĕre: in mod.L. intrōsusceptio. Cf. intra-susception in intra- prefix 3 and the erron. intersusception.] The action of taking up or receiving within; intussusception. 1. Phys. and Biol. = intussusception 2.
1816Keith Phys. Bot. II. 90 The intro-susception of non⁓elastic fluids. 1827H. Steuart Planter's G. (1828) 221 These act as so many superadded mouths, to take up, by means of introsusception, the food proper for the nourishment of the plant. 2. Path. = intussusception 3.
1786J. C. Lettsom (title) The history of an extraordinary introsusception... With an account of the dissection. By..Whately. 1794–6E. Darwin Zoon. (1801) III. 253 This malady is occasioned sometimes by an introsusception of a part of the intestine into another part of it. 1822–34Good's Study Med. (ed. 4) I. 160 One portion of the affected intestine, constringed and lessened in its diameter, has fallen into another portion below it, and thus produced what is called an introsusception. 1857Berkeley Cryptog. Bot. §123. 150 In many instances, the inner membrane of each cell is singularly depressed at either end by a sort of introsusception, and sometimes it protrudes into the neighbouring cell. 3. = intussusception 1, 1 b.
a1834Coleridge in Fraser's Mag. (1835) XII. 494 The organising forces..must subsist in some such bond or..introsusception..as will warrant us in the conclusion that they are at once one and many. 1841J. H. Newman Tracts for Times No. 90. 50 He thus opposes the doctrine of introsusception, which the spiritual view of the Real Presence naturally suggests. 1857De Quincey Goldsmith Wks. VI. 222 Law and arms..through their essential functions..opened for themselves a permanent necessity of introsusception into the organism of the state. |