释义 |
ˈpresbyte [ad. Gr. πρεσβύτης an old man (Aristotle, Prob. 31. 25). So F. presbyte, mod.L. presbyta.] = presbyope. (The modern use is not that of Aristotle, who only raises the question why an old man (πρεσβύτης) is long-sighted. Nor is it recognized even in the 1762 ed. of Castelli Lex. Med. I. Bywater.)
[1704J. Harris Lex. Techn. I, Presbitæ, are those Men who by Old Age, or other Accidents, have the Globe of the Eye so flat, that the produced Visual Rays pass the Retina before they unite. 1727–41Chambers Cycl. s.v., If the distance between the retina and the crystalline be too small, the person will likewise be a presbyta.] 1846Worcester cites Prof. Farrar for Presbyte. |