请输入您要查询的英文单词:

 

单词 conjugate
释义

conjugate


con·ju·gate

C0572600 (kŏn′jə-gāt′)v. con·ju·gat·ed, con·ju·gat·ing, con·ju·gates v.tr.1. Grammar To inflect (a verb) in its forms for distinctions such as number, person, voice, mood, and tense.2. To join together.v.intr.1. Biology To undergo conjugation.2. Grammar To be inflected.adj. (-gĭt, -gāt′)1. Joined together, especially in a pair or pairs; coupled.2. Mathematics & Physics Inversely or oppositely related with respect to one of a group of otherwise identical properties, especially designating either or both of a pair of complex numbers differing only in the sign of the imaginary term.3. Linguistics Derived from a common source, such as the words foul and filth.4. Chemistry Conjugated.n. (-gĭt, -gāt′)1. Mathematics & Physics Any of a set of numbers that satisfy the same irreducible polynomial.2. Chemistry A chemical compound that has been formed by the joining of two or more compounds.
[Latin coniugāre, coniugāt-, to join together : com-, com- + iugāre, to join (from iugum, yoke; see yeug- in Indo-European roots).]
con′ju·gate′ly adv.con′ju·ga′tive adj.con′ju·ga′tor n.

conjugate

vb 1. (Grammar) (tr) grammar to inflect (a verb) systematically; state or set out the conjugation of (a verb) 2. (Grammar) (intr) (of a verb) to undergo inflection according to a specific set of rules 3. (Chemistry) (tr) to join (two or more substances) together, esp in such a way that the resulting substance may easily be turned back into its original components 4. (Biology) (intr) biology to undergo conjugation 5. (tr) obsolete to join together, esp in marriage adj 6. joined together in pairs; coupled 7. (Mathematics) (Maths) a. (of two angles) having a sum of 360°b. (of two complex numbers) differing only in the sign of the imaginary part as 4 + 3i and 4 – 3ic. (of two algebraic numbers) being roots of the same irreducible algebraic equation with rational coefficients: 3 ± 2 √2 are conjugate algebraic numbers, being roots of x2 – 6x + 1. d. (of two elements of a square matrix) interchanged when the rows and columns are interchangede. (of two arcs) forming a complete circle or other closed curved figure 8. (Chemistry) chem of, denoting, or concerning the state of equilibrium in which two liquids can exist as two separate phases that are both solutions. The liquid that is the solute in one phase is the solvent in the other 9. (Chemistry) another word for conjugated 10. (Chemistry) chem (of acids and bases) related by loss or gain of a proton: Cl is the conjugate base of HCl; HCl is the conjugate acid of Cl. 11. (General Physics) physics a. joined by a reciprocal relationship, such as in the case of two quantities, points, etc, that are interchangeable with respect to the properties of each of themb. (of points connected with a lens) having the property that an object placed at one point will produce an image at the other point 12. (Botany) (of a compound leaf) having one pair of leaflets 13. (Linguistics) (of words) cognate; related in origin n one of a pair or set of conjugate substances, values, quantities, words, etc [C15: from Latin conjugāre to join together, from com- together + jugāre to marry, connect, from jugum a yoke] ˈconjugable adj ˈconjugately adv ˈconjugateness n ˈconjuˌgative adj ˈconjuˌgator n

con•ju•gate

(v. ˈkɒn dʒəˌgeɪt; adj., n. ˈkɒn dʒə gɪt, -ˌgeɪt)

v. -gat•ed, -gat•ing,
adj., n. v.t. 1. a. to recite or display all or some subsets of the inflected forms of (a verb) in a fixed order: to conjugate the present tense of the verb be. b. to inflect (a verb). 2. to join together, esp. in marriage. v.i. 3. Biol. to unite; to undergo conjugation. 4. (of a verb) to be characterized by conjugation. adj. 5. joined together, esp. in a pair or pairs; coupled. 6. (of words) having a common derivation. 7. Math. a. (of two points, lines, etc.) so related as to be interchangeable in the enunciation of certain properties. b. (of two complex numbers) differing only in the sign of the imaginary part. 8. (of an acid and a base) related by the loss or gain of a proton: NH3is a base conjugate to NH4 + . n. 9. one of a group of conjugate words. 10. Math. a. either of two conjugate points, lines, etc. b. either of a pair of complex numbers of the type a + bi and abi, where a and b are real numbers and i is imaginary. [1425–75; late Middle English (adj.) < Late Latin conjugātus, past participle of conjugāre to unite (Latin: to join in marriage)] con′ju•ga•ble (-gə bəl) adj. con′ju•ga•bly, adv. con′ju•ga`tive, adj.

conjugate


Past participle: conjugated
Gerund: conjugating
Imperative
conjugate
conjugate
Present
I conjugate
you conjugate
he/she/it conjugates
we conjugate
you conjugate
they conjugate
Preterite
I conjugated
you conjugated
he/she/it conjugated
we conjugated
you conjugated
they conjugated
Present Continuous
I am conjugating
you are conjugating
he/she/it is conjugating
we are conjugating
you are conjugating
they are conjugating
Present Perfect
I have conjugated
you have conjugated
he/she/it has conjugated
we have conjugated
you have conjugated
they have conjugated
Past Continuous
I was conjugating
you were conjugating
he/she/it was conjugating
we were conjugating
you were conjugating
they were conjugating
Past Perfect
I had conjugated
you had conjugated
he/she/it had conjugated
we had conjugated
you had conjugated
they had conjugated
Future
I will conjugate
you will conjugate
he/she/it will conjugate
we will conjugate
you will conjugate
they will conjugate
Future Perfect
I will have conjugated
you will have conjugated
he/she/it will have conjugated
we will have conjugated
you will have conjugated
they will have conjugated
Future Continuous
I will be conjugating
you will be conjugating
he/she/it will be conjugating
we will be conjugating
you will be conjugating
they will be conjugating
Present Perfect Continuous
I have been conjugating
you have been conjugating
he/she/it has been conjugating
we have been conjugating
you have been conjugating
they have been conjugating
Future Perfect Continuous
I will have been conjugating
you will have been conjugating
he/she/it will have been conjugating
we will have been conjugating
you will have been conjugating
they will have been conjugating
Past Perfect Continuous
I had been conjugating
you had been conjugating
he/she/it had been conjugating
we had been conjugating
you had been conjugating
they had been conjugating
Conditional
I would conjugate
you would conjugate
he/she/it would conjugate
we would conjugate
you would conjugate
they would conjugate
Past Conditional
I would have conjugated
you would have conjugated
he/she/it would have conjugated
we would have conjugated
you would have conjugated
they would have conjugated
Thesaurus
Noun1.conjugate - a mixture of two partially miscible liquids A and B produces two conjugate solutions: one of A in B and another of B in Aconjugate - a mixture of two partially miscible liquids A and B produces two conjugate solutions: one of A in B and another of B in Aconjugate solutionsolution - a homogeneous mixture of two or more substances; frequently (but not necessarily) a liquid solution; "he used a solution of peroxide and water"
Verb1.conjugate - unite chemically so that the product is easily broken down into the original compoundschemical science, chemistry - the science of matter; the branch of the natural sciences dealing with the composition of substances and their properties and reactionscoalesce, conflate, fuse, immix, mix, merge, commingle, blend, meld, flux, combine - mix together different elements; "The colors blend well"
2.conjugate - add inflections showing person, number, gender, tense, aspect, etc.; "conjugate the verb"inflect - change the form of a word in accordance as required by the grammatical rules of the language
3.conjugate - undergo conjugationbiological science, biology - the science that studies living organismschange - undergo a change; become different in essence; losing one's or its original nature; "She changed completely as she grew older"; "The weather changed last night"
Adj.1.conjugate - joined together especially in a pair or pairscoupled, conjugatedunited - characterized by unity; being or joined into a single entity; "presented a united front"
2.conjugate - (of a pinnate leaflet) having only one pair of leafletscompound - composed of more than one part; "compound leaves are composed of several lobes; "compound flower heads"
3.conjugate - formed by the union of two compounds; "a conjugated protein"conjugatedchemical science, chemistry - the science of matter; the branch of the natural sciences dealing with the composition of substances and their properties and reactionsbound - held with another element, substance or material in chemical or physical union
4.conjugate - of an organic compound; containing two or more double bonds each separated from the other by a single bondconjugatedchemical science, chemistry - the science of matter; the branch of the natural sciences dealing with the composition of substances and their properties and reactionsbound - held with another element, substance or material in chemical or physical union

conjugate

verbTo bring or come together into a united whole:coalesce, combine, compound, concrete, conjoin, connect, consolidate, couple, join, link, marry, meld, unify, unite, wed, yoke.
Translations
列举动词的变化形式

conjugate

(ˈkondʒugeit) verb to give the different parts of (a verb). 列舉動詞的詞形變化 列举动词的变化形式ˌconjuˈgation noun 動詞變化 动词的变化形式
See conjugate

conjugate


conjugate

1. Mathsa. (of two angles) having a sum of 360° b. (of two complex numbers) differing only in the sign of the imaginary part as 4 + 3i and 4 -- 3i c. (of two algebraic numbers) being roots of the same irreducible algebraic equation with rational coefficients d. (of two elements of a square matrix) interchanged when the rows and columns are interchanged e. (of two arcs) forming a complete circle or other closed curved figure 2. Chem of, denoting, or concerning the state of equilibrium in which two liquids can exist as two separate phases that are both solutions. The liquid that is the solute in one phase is the solvent in the other 3. Chem (of acids and bases) related by loss or gain of a proton 4. Physicsa. joined by a reciprocal relationship, such as in the case of two quantities, points, etc., that are interchangeable with respect to the properties of each of them b. (of points connected with a lens) having the property that an object placed at one point will produce an image at the other point 5. (of a compound leaf) having one pair of leaflets

conjugate

[′kän·jə·gət] (geology) Pertaining to fractures in which both sets of veins or joints show the same strike but opposite dip. Pertaining to any two sets of veins or joints lying perpendicular. (mathematics) An element y of a group related to a given element x by y = z -1 xz or zy = xz, where z is another element of the group. Also known as transform. For a quaternion, x = x0+ x1 i + x2 j + x3 k, the quaternion x̄ = x0-x1 i-x2 j-x3 k. complex conjugate

conjugate


conjugate

 [kon´joo͡-gāt] 1. paired, or equally coupled; working in union.2. a conjugate diameter of the pelvic inlet, especially the true conjugate diameter; see pelvic diameter.

con·ju·gate

(kon'jŭ-gāt), [TA] 1. Joined or paired. Synonym(s): conjugated2. Conjugate diameters of the pelvis. The distance between any two specified points on the periphery of the pelvic canal. [L. conjugatus, joined together. See conjugata]

conjugate

(kŏn′jə-gāt′)v. conju·gated, conju·gating, conju·gates v.tr. To join together.v.intr. Biology To undergo conjugation.adj. (-gĭt, -gāt′)1. Joined together, especially in a pair or pairs; coupled.2. Chemistry Conjugated.n. (-gĭt, -gāt′) Chemistry A chemical compound that has been formed by the joining of two or more compounds.
con′ju·gate′ly adv.con′ju·ga′tive adj.con′ju·ga′tor n.

con·ju·gate

(kon'jŭ-găt) [TA] 1. Joined or paired.
Synonym(s): conjugated.
2. A conjugate diameter of the pelvis. The distance between any two specified points on the periphery of the pelvic canal.
See: conjugata
[L. conjugatus, joined together]

conjugate

Coupled or joined in pairs or groups. Of co-valently linked complexes of two or more molecules.

con·ju·gate

(kon'jŭ-găt) [TA] Joined or paired, conjugated. [L. conjugatus, joined together]

conjugate


Related to conjugate: complex conjugate
  • all
  • verb
  • noun
  • adj

Synonyms for conjugate

verb to bring or come together into a united whole

Synonyms

  • coalesce
  • combine
  • compound
  • concrete
  • conjoin
  • connect
  • consolidate
  • couple
  • join
  • link
  • marry
  • meld
  • unify
  • unite
  • wed
  • yoke

Synonyms for conjugate

noun a mixture of two partially miscible liquids A and B produces two conjugate solutions: one of A in B and another of B in A

Synonyms

  • conjugate solution

Related Words

  • solution

verb unite chemically so that the product is easily broken down into the original compounds

Related Words

  • chemical science
  • chemistry
  • coalesce
  • conflate
  • fuse
  • immix
  • mix
  • merge
  • commingle
  • blend
  • meld
  • flux
  • combine

verb add inflections showing person, number, gender, tense, aspect, etc.

Related Words

  • inflect

verb undergo conjugation

Related Words

  • biological science
  • biology
  • change

adj joined together especially in a pair or pairs

Synonyms

  • coupled
  • conjugated

Related Words

  • united

adj (of a pinnate leaflet) having only one pair of leaflets

Related Words

  • compound

adj formed by the union of two compounds

Synonyms

  • conjugated

Related Words

  • chemical science
  • chemistry
  • bound

adj of an organic compound

Synonyms

  • conjugated

Related Words

  • chemical science
  • chemistry
  • bound
随便看

 

英语词典包含2567994条英英释义在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词的英英翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。

 

Copyright © 2004-2022 Newdu.com All Rights Reserved
更新时间:2025/2/7 14:50:12