释义 |
am·pul·la \amˈpu̇lə, -ˈpə-, aam-\ noun (plural ampul·lae \-ˌlē, -ī\) Etymology: Middle English, from Old English, from Latin, diminutive of amphora — more at amphora 1. : a flask of glass or earthenware having a somewhat globular body and two handles and used especially by the ancient Romans to hold ointment, perfume, or wine 2. a. : a vessel in which holy oil is kept < the ampulla ordered for the coronation of Charles II — L.G.W.Legg > b. : a cruet in which wine or water for ecclesiastical use is kept 3. [New Latin, from Latin] a. : one of the small bladders attached to the submerged parts of plants of Utricularia and related genera b. : one of the flask-shaped swellings on the hyphae of certain fungi 4. [New Latin, from Latin] : a flasklike dilatation or sac: as a. : the dilatation containing a patch of sensory epithelium at one end of each semicircular canal of the ear b. : one of the muscular vesicles of the water vascular system of echinoderms by the contraction of which the suckers are protruded c. : one of the dilatations of the lactiferous tubules of the mammary glands that serve as reservoirs for milk d. : the middle portion of the fallopian tube |