释义 |
tis·sue I. \ˈti(ˌ)shü, ˈtish(ˌ)yü, ˈti(ˌ)shu̇, ˈtish(ˌ)yu̇, before a vowel often -_sh(y)əw; chiefly South -_sh(y)ə before a consonant or pause or before a vowel in a following word; chiefly Brit ˈti(ˌ)syü or ˈti(ˌ)syu̇ or ˈtisyəw; chiefly dial ˈtishē or -shi in “tissue paper”\ noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English tissu, from Old French, from past participle of tistre to weave, from Latin texere — more at technical 1. a. (1) archaic : a rich ornamented cloth usually of silk interwoven with gold or silver threads (2) : a fine lightweight fabric often sheer or semitransparent; especially : a gauze of silk or wool b. : something resembling a fabric of tissue : an intricate or interrelated number of things forming a web : a complicated mesh < the testimony … is a tissue of lies — W.A.White > < most battlefield history of the past is a tissue of myths — S.L.A.Marshall > 2. a. : tissue paper b. : carbon paper 2 c. : cleansing tissue 3. a. : an aggregate of cells usually of a particular kind or kinds together with their intercellular substance that form one of the structural materials out of which the body of a plant or an animal is built up — see collenchyma, parenchyma, prosenchyma, sclerenchyma; connective tissue, epithelium, muscle nerve 2 b. : something resembling the living tissue of a plant or animal < give vitality and vigor to the tissues of our law — B.N.Cardozo > < collective bargaining … is part of the living tissue of society — Current Biography > II. adjective Etymology: Middle English, from tissu tissue : resembling a fabric of tissue in weight, texture, or appearance : characterized by unusual sheerness < tissue gingham > < tissue faille > III. transitive verb (-ed/-ing/-s) Etymology: Middle English tissuen, from tissu tissue : to weave into tissue : embroider by or as if by interweaving < covered with cloth of gold tissued upon blue — Francis Bacon > IV. transitive verb : to remove (as cleansing cream) with a tissue |