disco- 或 disc-  也作 disci-
pref.(前缀)
语源
pref.(前缀)
- Disk:
 盘,盘状的:
 discoid.
 盘状的
- Phonograph record:
 唱片,唱盘:
 discophile.
 唱片收藏家;唱片爱好者
语源
- Latin 
 拉丁语
- from Greek disko- 
 源自 希腊语 disko-
- from diskos [disk] * see  disk 
 源自 diskos [盘,唱盘] *参见 disk
disco-
1 
a combining form representing disk or disc in compound words:
discifloral.
2 
a combining form meaning “phonograph record”, used in the formation of compound words:
discography.
Also, disci-; especially before a vowel, disc-.
Related Words
- disc-
- disci-
disco-
⇨ see disc-
⇨ see disc-
1883 Syd. Soc. Lex,*Discoblastula, Häckel's term for the small fluid-containing cavity lying between the discomorula and the nutritive yolk of a meroblastic ovum. 
Ibid. ,*Discocarp, a collection of fruits in a hollow receptacle, as in the rose. 
[ 1866Treas. Bot. ,Discocarpium. ] 
1887 Garnsey & Balfour tr. De Bary's Fungi v. 198Of gymnocarpous and *discocarpous forms. 
1883 Syd. Soc. Lex. ,*Discogastrula, Häckel's term for that form of gastrula which develops from a disc situated on a mass of food yolk, as in Ganoid fishes. 
1888 Athenæum 3 Mar. 279/2 Evidence of the pelobatoid rather than the *discoglossid affinities of the..genus. 
1883 Syd. Soc. Lex. ,*Discomorula, Häckel's term for the disc of cells which, during the segmentation of the impregnated meroblastic ovum, covers the nutritive vitellus as with a hood. 
1879 tr. Haeckel'sEvol. Man II. xix. 168All other *Discoplacental Animals. 
1881 Standard 23 June 5/2 The *discoplacentalian mammals. 
1900 W. Myers tr. Ehrlich & Lazarus'sHistol. Blood 51The *discoplasm loses its power of retaining the hæmoglobin, and gives it up to the blood plasma in ever increasing quantity. 
1913 Dorland Med. Dict. (ed. 7),Discoplasm, the structural part of a red blood-corpuscle. 
1888 Sollas in ChallengerRep. XXV. p. lvii,Varieties of the Triæne... *Discotriæne... The cladome is a disc in which separate cladi are not distinguishable; and the axial rods representing them extend but a short distance from the cladal origin. 
Ibid. ,The discotriæne combines in itself the characters of the desma and the ordinary spicule. 
disco-
— see disc-
— see disc-