| 单词 | obsolescent | 
| 释义 | obsolescentadj.n. 1.  That is becoming obsolete; going out of use or out of date. Also as n.: that which is obsolescent. ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > harm or detriment > disadvantage > uselessness > non-use > 			[adjective]		 > falling out of use obsolescent1755 obsolescing1892 1755    S. Johnson Dict. Eng. Lang. at Hereout  				All the words compounded of here and a preposition, except hereafter, are obsolete, or obsolescent. 1817    N. Webster Let. J. Pickering in  N. Amer. Rev. May 83  				Words of local use, under which may be arranged obsolete words, or rather obsolescent words. 1830    N. Amer. Rev. Apr. 375  				Would it not be the part of wisdom, instead of multiplying expensive constructions connected with an exploded or obsolescent system, to be beforehand, not only in introducing the new engine, but in preparing to meet and resist it? 1863    J. F. Kirk Hist. Charles the Bold II. 82  				The stronghold of obsolescent opinions and decaying sects. 1894    J. Wright Appeal Eng. Dial. Dict. 3  				In another generation the obsolescent will have become obsolete. 1940    S. Glasstone Text-bk. Physical Chem. x. 762  				The terms cryohydrate and cryohydric point are obsolescent and will not be employed further. 1969    P. B. Jordain Condensed Computer Encycl. 223  				The principal dialects today are FORTRAN II (now obsolescent) and FORTRAN IV. 1995    N.Y. Rev. Bks. 22 Dec. 61/3  				The courts called Great Sessions dispensed English justice, not the obsolescent blood-tribute and tribal inheritance provisions of old.  2.  Biology and Medicine. In the process of (apparent) disappearance or atrophy; imperfectly or indistinctly developed or underdeveloped; (of an organ, tissue, etc.) persisting although without function or activity. ΘΚΠ the world > life > biology > taxonomy > taxon > 			[adjective]		 > species or sub-species > deficient in part > of part obsolete1732 obsolescent1846 1846    J. D. Dana U.S. Exploring Exped.: Zoophytes iv. 80  				The Echinopores are other examples of prominent polyps, and obsolescent striæ to the coralla. 1879    G. Allen Colour-sense iii. 26  				The Law of Parsimony, whereby all unnecessary organs become gradually obsolescent. 1897    T. C. Allbutt et al.  Syst. Med. II. 11  				The fibroid patches..are a form of what is called retrograde or obsolescent tubercles. 1910    Amer. Naturalist 44 267  				In the sauropoda, as in the ratite birds, the second trochanter is obsolescent or wholly obsolete. 1940    Amer. Midland Naturalist 24 135  				Occipital carina usually forming a complete circle, but sometimes obsolescent behind fossa or proboscis. 1971    Brittonia 23 39  				Leaves alternate; blades broadly lanceolate..with the midvein ending in a mucro, marginally slightly revolute with numerous obsolescent serrulations. 1997    Jrnl. Amer. Soc. Nephrol. 8 824  				Biopsies showing a few globally obsolescent glomeruli or mild mesangial hypercellularity may be associated with greater difficulty in management but have been included in the broad category of MCD [= minimal change disease]. Derivatives  obsoˈlescently adv. rare in an obsolescent degree. ΘΚΠ the world > life > biology > taxonomy > taxon > 			[adverb]		 > species or sub-species > deficient or disappearing (of part or organ) obsoletely1810 obsolescently1846 1846    J. D. Dana U.S. Exploring Exped.: Zoophytes 320  				Polyps obsolescently tentaculate. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, March 2004; most recently modified version published online March 2022). <  | 
	
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