diplo- 或 dipl-
pref.(前缀)
语源
pref.(前缀)
- Double:
双倍的:
diplococcus.
双球菌 - Having double the basic number of chromosomes; diploid:
双倍体的:基本染色体数目加倍的;双倍体的:
diplont.
双倍体
语源
- From Greek
源自 希腊语 - from diploos [double] * see dwo-
源自 diploos [双倍的] *参见 dwo-
diplo- or (before a vowel) dipl-
combining form
double
⇒
diplococcus
Origin
from Greek, from diploos, from di-1 + -ploos -folddiplo-
Word Origin
1
a combining form meaning “double,” “in pairs,” used in the formation of compound words:
diplococcus.
Also, especially before a vowel, dipl-.
Origin
< Greek, combining form of diplóos twofold
Related Words
- diplodocus
- diplophonia
- -fold
- diplacusis
- diplobacillus
- diploblastic
diplo-a word element referring to pairs, doubles, as in diplocardiac.
Also, (before vowels), dipl-. [Greek, combining form of diploos twofold]
diplo-
combining form
⇨ see dipl-
combining form
⇨ see dipl-
diplo-
combining form
1.
- double表示“两”, “双”:
-
diplococcus.
2.
- diploid表示“二倍”, “二倍体”:
-
diplohaplontic.
词源
from Greek diplous 'double'.
1890 Billings Med. Dict. 400/2Diplakousis or Diplacusis.
1895 E. B. Titchener tr. Külpe'sOutl. Psychol. 299The abnormality (diplacusis) may be restricted to a single ear.
1970 J. V. Tobias Found. Mod. Auditory Theory I. x. 391One possible explanation for diplacusis is distortion.
1901 Jrnl. Exper. Med. V. 213The occurrence of acid-resisting diplococci or diplo-bacilli.
1908 Practitioner Feb. 203 The diplobacillus of Morax-Axenfeld.
1957 M. B. Jacobs et al.Dict. Microbiol. 78/2Diplobacilli, bacillus-type bacteria occurring in pairs, as, for example, Moraxella lacunata.
1957 Bergey's Man. DeterminativeBacteriol. (ed. 7) 419 Genus VII.Moraxella... Small rod-shaped cells which occur as diplobacilli.
1888 F. P. Billings in Amer. Nat. XXII. 123We may find two apparently mature organisms enclosed in a common capsule..These diplo-bacteria may assume a curved or sausage shape.
1854–67 C. A. Harris Dict. Med. Terminol. ,Diplocardiac, having a double heart.
1847 Craig, Diplocephalia.
1883 Syd. Soc. Lex. ,Diplocephaly, in Teratology, the condition of a fœtus having two heads on one body.
1887 W. J. Sollas in Encycl. Brit. XXII. 415/1This, which from the marked presence of both prosodal and aphodal canals may be termed the diplodal type of the Rhagon canal system, occurs but rarely.
1851 Fraser's Mag. XLIII. 289An orthodoxy with two tails—or a diplo⁓doxy—to coin a word—which affirms the co-existence of two separate beliefs, while it expresses no dogma as to the truth of either.
1851 Richardson Geol. viii. 257The nervous system is composed of a chain of ganglia disposed in pairs, and united by nervous cords: hence the term diplo⁓gangliata.
1835–6 Todd Cycl. Anat. I. 509/1That form of monstrosity..called Diplogenesis.
1878 Bartley tr. Topinard'sAnthrop. v. 162Diplogenesis, in which the whole body is more or less double.
1896 Nat. Sci. Nov. 288Cope's theory of Diplogenesis.
1876 Catal. Sci. App. S. Kens.No. 2052Diplograph. Writing machine for the Blind, by which writing in relief and ordinary writing are performed at the same time.
1823 J. Elmes Mem. & Life C. Wren 23In 1647..he had a patent granted him for seventeen years, for a diplographic instrument for writing with two pens.
1750 C. Wren Parentalia 212He invented the art of double writing..by an instrument called the Diplographical Instrument. [ Wren]
1758 Grand Mag. ofMag. Nov.,In 1647, about three years before Mr. Wren publicly produced his diplographical instruments.
1824 Mech. Mag. No. 60. 59Diplography.
1921 Bot. Abstr. VI. 251 (heading)Genetical phenomena and taxonomy in haplonts and diplohaplonts in the vegetable kingdom.
1938 Bot. Rev. IV. 136Diplohaplonts with unlike alternating generations are common among the Phaeophyceae.
Ibid. 137A lifecycle identical with that of the diplohaplontic Phaeophyceae with dissimilar generations has been described for Stigeoclonium.
1965 Bell & Combe tr. Strasburger'sTextbk. Bot. (newed. ) i. i. 36In many of the more highly developed algae..the diploid zygote grows first into a multicellular diploid plant, the sporophyte. After the development of numerous diploid spore-mother cells meiosis takes place freely. Thus from the original nuclear fusion..a multitude of haploid cells (gonospores) are produced. These organisms are termed diplohaplonts.
1836–9 Todd Cycl. Anat. II. 412/2Belonging to the diploneurose..divisions of the animal kingdom.
1870 Bentley Bot. 369With two rows, they are diploperistomous.
1925 E. B. Wilson Cell (ed. 3) 1130Diplophase, that phase of the life-history, particularly in the antithetic alternation of generations, in which the nuclei are haploid, as in the sporophyte.
1965 J. Wilkinson tr. Langeron'sOutl. Mycology (ed. 2) ix. 374Meiosis intervenes between the diplophase and the haplophase, fertilization between the haplophase and the diplophase.
1884 A. Hyatt in Proc. BostonSoc. Nat. Hist. XXIII. 89In this way the primitive differentiation of the placula into two layers is established in what we have designated the diploplacula.
1864 Webster, Diplopod ( Zool. ), one of a group of myriapods.
1883 Smithsonian Inst. Rep. ,Zool. (Cent. Dict. ),One of the diplopod myriopods.
1899,1962 Diplopore . [ see haplopores.v. haplo-]
1884 O. C. Marsh Amer. Jurassic Dinosaurs inAmer. Jrnl. Sc. CXXVII. 334In Ceratosaurus..These vertebræ show the diplosphenal articulation seen in Megalosaurus.
1888 Rolleston & Jackson Anim. Life 525The lateral eyes in Scorpionidæ and all the eyes of Limulus are monostichous; the central eyes of the former group and other Arachnids, so far as known, diplostichous.
ORIGIN: Greek , from diploos , diplous double; also repr. diploid : see -o- .
diplo-
combining form
see dipl-
see dipl-
diplo-
Prefix
- double
Etymology
From combining form of Ancient Greek διπλόος (diplóos), διπλοῦς (diploûs, “double”).
Derived terms
English words prefixed with diplo-