protoplasm

['protəplæzəm]
  • n. 原生质;原浆;细胞质

英英释义


1. the living substance of a cell (including cytoplasm and nucleus)

实用场景例句


They use the protoplasm in the vat as an energy source.
他们把灵魂装到一个大桶里作为能量来源.

电影对白

Others are associated with the protoplasm of the cell.
其它一些与细胞的细胞质有关.

辞典例句

Amino acid is the primary resource to synthesize protein, ferment, chlorophyll and other protoplasm.
氨基酸为植物体内合成蛋白质 、 酵素 、 叶绿素及其他生命物质的主要成分.

期刊摘选

With the formation of protoplasm by sheer permutation & combination of atoms, the life began here.
随着原生质的形成——它只是原子的排列组合 —— 生命诞生了.

期刊摘选

Attempts have been made to construct protoplasm in the lab.
已多次尝试在实验室里构造原生质.

期刊摘选

I know the protoplasm is the basis of all animals and plants.
我知道原生质是动物和植物的基础.

期刊摘选

Each cell possesses a nucleus imbedded in protoplasm.
每个细胞都具有核,细胞核位于原生质中.

辞典例句

This release of the products of cellular protoplasm to the extracellular fluid accounts for several events.
细胞浆产物进入细胞外液后被排出,即可导致以下各现象.

辞典例句

This modifiability is one of the intrinsic qualities of living protoplasm.
这种可变性是生命原生质固有的性质之一.

期刊摘选

中文词源


protoplasm 原生质

proto-,原始的,最早的,-plasm,形状,词源同plastic.

双语例句


1. Others are associated with the protoplasm of the cell.
其它一些与细胞的细胞质有关.

来自辞典例句

2. Each cell possesses a nucleus imbedded in protoplasm.
每个细胞都具有核,细胞核位于原生质中.

来自辞典例句

3. This release of the products of cellular protoplasm to the extracellular fluid accounts for several events.
细胞浆产物进入细胞外液后被排出,即可导致以下各现象.

来自辞典例句

4. They use the protoplasm in the vat as an energy source.
他们把灵魂装到一个大桶里作为能量来源.

来自电影对白

5. The streaming rotary motion of protoplasm within certain cells and one - celled organisms.
'胞'.''''.'质'. ''环流在某些细胞或 单细胞 微生物中的细胞质的环状流动.

来自互联网

英文词源


protoplasm (n.)
1848, from German Protoplasma (1846), used by German botanist Hugo von Mohl (1805-1872), on notion of "first-formed," from Greek proto- "first" (see proto-) + plasma "something molded" (see -plasm).

The word was in Late Latin with a sense of "first created thing," and it might have existed in ecclesiastical Greek in a different sense. It was used 1839 by Czech physiologist Johannes Evangelista Purkinje (1787-1869) to denote the gelatinous fluid found in living tissue. The modern meaning is a refinement of this. This word prevailed, though German language purists preferred Urschleim.