释义 |
insertion
in·ser·tion I0161400 (ĭn-sûr′shən)n.1. The act or process of inserting.2. Something inserted, as an ornamental strip of lace or embroidery inserted between pieces of fabric.3. Anatomy The point or mode of attachment of a skeletal muscle to the bone or other body part that it moves.4. Genetics The addition, as by mutation, of one or more nucleotides to a chromosome. in·ser′tion·al adj.insertion (ɪnˈsɜːʃən) n1. the act of inserting or something that is inserted2. (Journalism & Publishing) a word, sentence, correction, etc, inserted into text, such as a newspaper3. (Clothing & Fashion) a strip of lace, embroidery, etc, between two pieces of material4. (Anatomy) anatomy the point or manner of attachment of a muscle to the bone that it moves5. (Botany) botany the manner or point of attachment of one part to another inˈsertional adjin•ser•tion (ɪnˈsɜr ʃən) n. 1. the act of inserting. 2. something inserted. 3. Bot., Zool. a. the place or manner of attachment, as of a muscle to the part it moves or a leaf to a stem. b. the part of the structure that is attached. 4. lace, embroidery, or the like, to be sewn between parts of other material. 5. injection (def. 4). [1570–80; < Late Latin] in•ser′tion•al, adj. insertion- graft, splice - A graft is one thing attached to another by insertion or implantation so it becomes part of it; a splice is the joining of two things end-to-end to make a new whole.
- pilot hole - A small hole drilled or hammered for the insertion of a nail or screw, or for drilling a larger hole.
- punctuate, punctuation - Punctuate—which first meant "point out"—and punctuation are from Latin punctus, "prick, point"; the present-day meaning comes from the insertion of "points" or dots into written texts to indicate pauses (once called "pointing").
- insert, insertion - The Latin elements in- and serere, "to join, plant," are part of insert and insertion.
ThesaurusNoun | 1. | insertion - a message (spoken or written) that is introduced or inserted; "with the help of his friend's interpolations his story was eventually told"; "with many insertions in the margins"interpolationsubject matter, content, message, substance - what a communication that is about something is about | | 2. | insertion - the act of putting one thing into anotherintromission, introductionmovement - the act of changing the location of something; "the movement of cargo onto the vessel"cannulation, cannulisation, cannulization, canulation, canulisation, canulization, intubation - the insertion of a cannula or tube into a hollow body organinstillation, instillment, instilment - the introduction of a liquid (by pouring or injection) drop by dropenclosing, envelopment, inclosure, enclosure - the act of enclosing something inside something elseinjection - the forceful insertion of a substance under pressureblood transfusion, transfusion - the introduction of blood or blood plasma into a vein or arteryperfusion - pumping a liquid into an organ or tissue (especially by way of blood vessels) |
insertionnoun1. inclusion, introduction, interpolation the first experiment involving the insertion of a new gene2. insert, addition, inclusion, supplement, implant, inset The correction to the text may involve an insertion or a deletion.insertionnounAn item inserted, as in a diary, register, or reference book:entry, posting.Translationsinsert (inˈsəːt) verb to put or place (something) in. He inserted the money in the parking meter; An extra chapter has been inserted into the book; They inserted the announcement in the newspaper. 插入 插入inˈsertion (-ʃən) noun 插入 插入insertion
insertion1. Anatomy the point or manner of attachment of a muscle to the bone that it moves 2. Botany the manner or point of attachment of one part to another insertion[in′sər·shən] (aerospace engineering) injection (anatomy) The point at which a muscle is attached to a bone that moves when the muscle contracts; it is the distal end of the muscle. (cell and molecular biology) The addition of an extranumerary base pair to double-stranded deoxyribonucleic acid; causes errors in transcription. See insertioninsertion
insertion [in-ser´shun] 1. the act of implanting, or condition of being implanted.2. the site of attachment, as of a muscle to the bone that it moves.3. in genetics, a rare nonreciprocal type of translocation in which a segment is removed from one chromosome and then inserted into a broken region of a nonhomologous chromosome.airway insertion and stabilization in the nursing interventions classification, a intervention" >nursing intervention defined as insertion or assisting with insertion and stabilization of an artificial airway" >airway. See also management" >artificial airway management.intravenous (IV) insertion in the nursing interventions classification, a intervention" >nursing intervention defined as insertion of a needle into a peripheral vein for the purpose of intravenous infusion" >intravenous infusion of fluids, blood, or medications.thought insertion the delusion that thoughts that are not one's own are being inserted into one's mind.velamentous insertion attachment of the umbilical cord to the edge of the placenta.in·ser·tion (in-sĕr'shŭn), 1. A putting in. 2. The usually more distal attachment of a muscle to the more movable part of the skeleton, as distinguished from origin. 3. In dentistry, the intraoral placing of a dental prosthesis. 4. Intrusion of fragments of any size from molecular to cytogenetic into the normal genome. [L. insertio, a planting in, fr. insero, -sertus, to plant in] insertion (ĭn-sûr′shən)n.1. The act or process of inserting.2. Anatomy The point or mode of attachment of a skeletal muscle to the bone or other body part that it moves.3. Genetics The addition, as by mutation, of one or more nucleotides to a chromosome. in·ser′tion·al adj.in·ser·tion (in-sĕr'shŭn) 1. A putting in. 2. The attachment of a muscle to the more movable part of the skeleton, as distinguished from origin. 3. dentistry The intraoral placing of a dental prosthesis. 4. Intrusion of fragments of any size from molecular to cytogenetic into the normal genome. [L. insertio, a planting in, fr. insero, -sertus, to plant in]insertion - a point of attachment of an organ such as a leaf or muscle.
- the point of application of force by a muscle.
in·ser·tion (in-sĕr'shŭn) 1. In dentistry, the intraoral placing of a dental prosthesis. 2. The usually more distal attachment of a muscle to the more movable part of the skeleton, as distinguished from origin. [L. insertio, a planting in, fr. insero, -sertus, to plant in]insertion Related to insertion: Insertion loss, Insertion sort, Insertion mutationinsertionn. the addition of language at a place within an existing typed or written document, which is always suspect unless initialled by all parties. insertion Related to insertion: Insertion loss, Insertion sort, Insertion mutation insertion is not available in the list of acronyms. Check:- general English dictionary
- Thesaurus
- medical dictionary
- legal dictionary
- encyclopedia
- Wikipedia
insertion Related to insertion: Insertion loss, Insertion sort, Insertion mutationSynonyms for insertionnoun inclusionSynonyms- inclusion
- introduction
- interpolation
noun insertSynonyms- insert
- addition
- inclusion
- supplement
- implant
- inset
Synonyms for insertionnoun an item inserted, as in a diary, register, or reference bookSynonymsSynonyms for insertionnoun a message (spoken or written) that is introduced or insertedSynonymsRelated Words- subject matter
- content
- message
- substance
noun the act of putting one thing into anotherSynonymsRelated Words- movement
- cannulation
- cannulisation
- cannulization
- canulation
- canulisation
- canulization
- intubation
- instillation
- instillment
- instilment
- enclosing
- envelopment
- inclosure
- enclosure
- injection
- blood transfusion
- transfusion
- perfusion
|