释义 |
-ole
-ole or -olsuff.1. A usually heterocyclic chemical compound containing a five-membered ring: pyrrole.2. A chemical compound, especially an ether, that does not contain hydroxyl: eucalyptol. [Partly from French (from Latin oleum, oil; see oil) and partly variant of -ol.]-ole or -oln combining form1. denoting an organic unsaturated compound containing a 5-membered ring: thiazole. 2. denoting an aromatic organic ether: anisole. [from Latin oleum oil, from Greek elaion, from elaia olive]
-ole suffix indicating something small: arteriole. [from Latin -olus, diminutive suffix]o•lé (oʊˈleɪ) interj., n., pl. o•les. interj. 1. (used as a shout of approval, triumph, or encouragement.) n. 2. a cry of “olé.” [1920–25; < Sp (h)ole, probably of expressive orig.] -ole1 , a suffix found in French loanwords of Latin origin, usu. diminutives, and later in adaptations of words borrowed directly from Latin or in New Latin coinages: areole; centriole; vacuole. [< French < Latin -olus, -ola, -olum, variant of -ulus -ule with stems ending in a vowel] -ole2 or -ol a suffix used in the names of chemical compounds, esp. five-membered, unsaturated rings (carbazole; indole; thiazole) and, less systematically, aromatic ethers (phenetole). [< French < Latin oleum oil] -oic
-oic[′ō·ik] (organic chemistry) A suffix indicating the presence of a ‒COOH group, as in ethyloic (‒CH2‒COOH). -ole
-ole Combining form meaning small or little (e.g., arteriole). [L. -olus, -ola, -olum, dim. suffixes] |