histo- 或 hist-
pref.(前缀)
语源
pref.(前缀)
- Body tissue:
身体组织:
histogenesis.
组织发生
语源
- From Greek
源自 希腊语 - from histos [web] * see stā-
源自 histos [网] *参见 stā-
histo- or (before a vowel) hist-
combining form
indicating animal or plant tissue
⇒
histology
⇒
histamine
Origin
from Greek, from histos webhisto-
Word Origin
1
a combining form meaning “tissue,” used in the formation of compound words:
histology.
Also, especially before a vowel, hist-.
Origin
< Greek, combining form of histós web (of a loom), tissue
Related Words
- hist-
- histoblast
- histochemistry
- histocompatibility
- histogen
- histogenesis
histo-a word element meaning 'tissue', as in histogen.
Also, (before vowels), hist-. [Greek, combining form of histos web, tissue]
histo-
combining form
⇨ see hist-
combining form
⇨ see hist-
histo-
(元音前亦作 hist-)
combining form
- Biology relating to organic tissue【生】表示“与组织有关的”:
-
histochemistry
histocompatibility.
词源
from Greek histos 'web, tissue'.
1874 A. J. Barker tr. Frey'sHistol. & Histochem. §48The chemical constitution of the animal cell..a field of *histo⁓chemical inquiry of which little is known.
1955 Brain LXXVIII. 327 Lafora bodies (intracellular amyloid bodies) were encountered, and were examined *histochemically.
1971 Jrnl. InsectPhysiol. XVII. 862Approximately 10 per cent of the histochemically identifiable lysosomal phosphatase remains in tissue fragments attached to the silk.
1861 N. Syd. Soc. Year-bk. 1Histology and *Histo-chemistry of man.
1948 G. D. Snell in Jrnl. Genetics XLIX. 87Genes of the type postulated in the genetic theory of tumour transplantation will be here referred to as *histocompatibility genes. The prefix ‘histo’ is used because the same genes which determine susceptibility or resistance to tumour transplants probably also determine susceptibility or resistance to tissue transplants in general.
1969 N. A. Mitchison et al. Organ Transplantation Today 26The genetic system controlling histocompatibility is not too complicated to defy analysis.
1964 Transplantation II. 656/1 An inbred strain is a *histocompatible donor to its F1 offspring.
1907 Practitioner Sept. 455 The *Histogenous Cells which originate locally as the result of local tissue proliferation.
1946 Nature 3 Aug. 147/2 Histogenous demarcation of infected tissue (for example, abscission in shot-hole disease of peach and demarcation by cork layer in black root rot of tobacco).
1886 Syd. Soc. Lex. ,*Histographic, of or belonging to histography.
1854 Mayne Expos. Lex. ,Histographicus, *Histographical.
1885 C. A. MacMunn in Proc. R.Soc. Nov. 248Observations made on the spectra of the organs and tissues..have brought to light the presence of a series of animal colouring matters. The name *histohæmatins is proposed for all these.
1963 R. P. Dales Annelids vi. 124The muscles of the body wall are partly *histolysed and those of the parapodia augmented.
1946 Nature 14 Sept. 367/2 The cutis acts as a physico-chemical barrier, inhibiting the penetration of the *histolysing substances into the zone of amputation from the regenerating epithelium.
1857 Dunglison Med. Lex. ,*Histolysis.
1886 Syd. Soc. Lex. ,Histolysis..the retrograde metamorphosis of the tissues.
1868 J. H. Bennett Clin. Lect. (ed. 5) 118The successive formation of histogenetic and *histolytic molecules.
1885 W. Roberts Treat. Urin. Dis. iii. iv. (ed. 4) 484The blood and tissues are..charged with the primary histolytic products.
1893 C. A. White in U.S. Nat. Mus. Ann. Rep. 1892 264The term *histometabasis is applied to that condition of fossilization in which an exchange of the original substance for another has occurred in such a manner as to retain or reproduce the minute and even the microscopic texture of the original.
1917 R. S. Lull Org. Evol. xxv. 412The resultant fossil retains..not only the external form but the histologic characters (histometabasis,..) of the original structure as well.
1883 Golgi in Alien &Neurol. July 387Other *histo⁓morphological particulars.
1857 Blackw. Mag. LXXXII 16Is..there..in albumen a mysterious *histomorphotic power in virtue of which it transmutes itself from the liquid into the solid condition?
1903 Detroit Med. Jrnl. Feb. 705/1The *histopathologic states of the finer structures of the labyrinth.
1947 Radiology XLIX. 292/2 Histopathologic changes in organs and tissue may occur in the absence of or prior to observable changes in the blood or blood-forming tissue.
1934 Webster, *Histopathological.
1940 E. von Haam in Textbk. Clin. Path. (ed. 2) xxii. 552The histopathological change in the syphilitic lesion is a valuable addition to diagnostic methods.
1946 Acta Med. Scand. CXXIII. 445Histopathological discoveries in amyotonia congenita.
1909 Webster, *Histopathologist.
1961 Lancet 30 Sept. 770/2 London histopathologists.
1966 Ibid. 31 Dec. 1450/1The wealth of photomicrographs is likely to appeal more to the practising histopathologist than to the physicians, dentists, and students.
1896 N. Walker tr. P. G. Unna (title)The *histopathology of the diseases of the skin.
1908 Practitioner Jan. 27 The histo-pathology of the lesions.
1959 Chambers's Encycl. VI. 123/2Fungi of this group cause systemic mycoses which may closely resemble tuberculosis in their symptomatology and histopathology.
1879 tr. Haeckel'sEvol. Man I. i. 24Tribal history of cells..*histophyly.
1886 Jrnl R. Microsc. Soc. Apr. 365On the *histophysics of the red blood-corpuscles.
Ibid. ,*Histophysiological researches on the extension of the nerves in the muscles.
1886 Syd. Soc. Lex. ,*Histophysiology.
1945 Christie & Peterson in Amer. Jrnl. Publ. Health XXXV. 1135/2*Histoplasmin is the term we used to designate the antigen we were using for skin testing. It is to be hoped that this natural term will be used for any antigen which may be found satisfactory for the purpose of skin testing in relation to histoplasmosis.
1964 B. D. Fallis Textbk. Path. ix. 242/1Skin tests using histoplasmin (the counterpart of tuberculin) suggest that in endemic areas histoplasmosis is a common disease, which is not usually clinically apparent.
1907 S. T. Darling in MarylandMed. Jrnl. L. 125 (heading)Notes on *histoplasmosis—a fatal disorder met with in tropical America.
1955 Sci. Amer. Jan. 44/3There has been a good deal of question about the mode of spread of histoplasmosis, a lung disease widely prevalent in the Middle West.
1973 Daily Colonist (Victoria, B.C. ) 13 May 40/1Pigeons on the roof are suspected as the source of an illness called histoplasmosis recently suffered by two law professors.
a1889 Dunglison Med. Lex. s.v. Plastic,Agents—hygienical or curative—which take part in such formations , may be termed *histotrophic or constructive. [ of organized tissue]
1876 Med. News (U.S. ) LII. 542That injections of *histozyme into the blood of dogs produced high fever.
histo-
medical word-forming element, from Greek histos "warp, web," literally "anything set upright," from histasthai "to stand," from PIE *sta- "to stand" (see stet). Taken by 19c. medical writers as the best Greek root from which to form terminology for "tissue."
histo-
combining form. tissue:Also, hist- before vowels.
Histochemistry = the chemistry of (organic) tissues.
[< Greek histós web, related to histánai to stand]
histo-
— see hist-
— see hist-
histo-hist- (before vowels) histi-
Prefix
- biology Combining form with the meaning of tissue.
Etymology
From Ancient Greek ἱστός (histós, “web, tissue”).
Derived terms
English words prefixed with histo-