| 释义 | metaplasm
 met·a·plasm 1M0248700 (mĕt′ə-plăz′əm)n. Alteration of a word by the addition, omission, or transposition of sounds or syllables or the letters that represent them.[Middle English metaplasmus, from Latin, from Greek metaplasmos, remodeling, from metaplassein, to remold : meta-, meta- + plassein, to mold; see pelə- in Indo-European roots.]
 met′a·plas′tic (-plăs′tĭk), met′a·plas′mic (-plăz′mĭk) adj.
 
 met·a·plasm 2M0248700 (mĕt′ə-plăz′əm)n. Cellular materials such as pigment granules or starch grains that were formerly considered to be nonliving, in contrast to the protoplasm.[meta- + -plasm.]
 met′a·plas′mic (-plăz′mĭk) adj.
 metaplasm(ˈmɛtəˌplæzəm) n (Physiology) the nonliving constituents, such as starch and pigment granules, of the cytoplasm of a cell ˌmetaˈplasmic adjTranslationsmetaplasm
 metaplasm[′med·ə‚plaz·əm]  (cell and molecular biology) The ergastic substance of protoplasm.metaplasm
 metaplasm(mĕt′ə-plăz′əm)n. Cellular materials such as pigment granules or starch grains that were formerly considered to be nonliving, in contrast to the protoplasm.met′a·plas′mic (-plăz′mĭk) adj.
 metaplasmAn obsolete, nonspecific term for any cytoplasmic inclusion.cell in·clu·sions(sel in-klū'zhŭnz) 1. The residual elements of the cytoplasm that are metabolic products of the cell (e.g., pigment granules or crystals).Synonym(s): metaplasm. 2. Storage materials such as glycogen or fat. 3. Engulfed material such as carbon or other foreign substances.
 See also: inclusion bodies
 metaplasmthe lifeless constituents of protoplasm. |