lacto- 或 lact-
pref.(前缀)
语源
pref.(前缀)
- Milk:
乳:
lactoprotein.
乳蛋白 - Lactose:
乳糖:
lactase.
乳糖酶 - Lactic acid:
前缀,表“乳酸":
lactate.
乳酸盐
语源
- From Latin lac lact- [milk] * see melg-
源自 拉丁语 lac lact- [乳汁(液)] *参见 melg-
lacto- or (before a vowel) lact-
combining form
indicating milk
⇒
lactobacillus
Origin
from Latin lact-, lac milklacto-
Word Origin
1
a combining form meaning “milk,” used in the formation of compound words (lactometer); specialized in chemical terminology to mean “lactate,” or “lactic acid.”.
Also, lacti-; especially before a vowel, lact-.
Origin
< Latin lact- (stem of lac milk) + -o-
Related Words
- lact-
- lacti-
- lactobacillus
- lactoferrin
- lactoflavin
- lactogenic
lacto-variant of lact-, before consonants.
lacto-
combining form
⇨ see lact-
combining form
⇨ see lact-
lacto-
combining form
1.
- of or relating to milk表示(与)乳(有关)的:
-
lactoscope.
2.
- from or relating to lactic acid or lactose表示来自或与乳酸或乳糖有关的:
-
lactobacillus.
词源
from Latin lac, lact-'milk'.
1884 Health Exhib. Catal. 25/1Graduated Cream Glasses, *Lactobutyrometer.
1855 Mayne Expos. Lex. ,*Lactocele.
1879 A. W. Blyth in Jrnl. Chem. Soc. XXXV. 532After the liquid from which the galactin has been removed had been freed from the excess of lead by hydrogen sulphide, an alkaloïdal colouring matter, for which I propose the name of ‘*lactochrome’, may be separated by the addition of nitrate of mercury solution.
1914 Jrnl. Biol. Chem. XVII. 261The facts brought out by this investigation point very clearly to a very close relationship existing between the yellow lactochrome of milk whey and the urochrome of urine.
1936 W. L. Davies Chem. Milk xi. 218Milk from other species of mammals also contains lactochrome. It is present in human milk.
1953 Fruton & Simmonds Gen. Biochem. xiii. 319In 1879 Blyth described the isolation from milk of a yellow pigment (named lactochrome) which showed a striking green fluorescence... By 1936 the chemical nature of the yellow pigment of egg yolk and of milk had been established..; it was shown that this pigment, named riboflavin, is identical with vitamin B2.
1933 Brit. Chem. Abstr. a. 847/2 (heading)*Lactoflavin, the pigment of milk.
1938 Encycl. Brit. Bk. of Year 651/1Recently it has been found that vitamin B2 consists of three components, lactoflavin, vitamin B6..and pellagrous preventing or p.p. factor.
1943 Sumner & Somers Chem. & Methods of Enzymes xiii. 244Various flavins were described, e.g., lactoflavin of milk, hepatoflavin of liver... The flavin of these workers was the same substance which is called today ‘riboflavin’, or sometimes, ‘lactoflavin’.
1946 J. F. Fulton Howell'sTextbk. Physiol. (ed. 15) liv. 1209Both the onset and maintenance of lactation require *lactogen.
1952 S. J. Folley in A. S. Parkes Marshall'sPhysiol. Reproduction (ed. 3) II. xx. 558When first discovered it was variously named prolactin (Riddle), galactin (Turner) and mammotropin (Lyons). Recent American practice tends to favour the terms lactogen or lactogenic hormone; the name prolactin is adopted in this chapter in accordance with English usage. [ sc. an anterior-pituitary protein hormone]
1962 Endocrinology LXXI. 218/2 The Raben preparation.., although quite potent as a lactogen in the pseudopregnant rabbit,.. has little activity in the local intradermal pigeon crop assay.
1967 Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. LVIII. 2307The recent indentification of human placental lactogen (HPL), a polypeptide hormone which shares both biological and immunological properties with pituitary growth hormone (HGH).
1939 Riddle & Bates in E. Allen Sex & Internal Secretions xx. 1089*Lactogenesis is a response to this hormone which excites also—in both sexes—additional responses more ancient phylogenetically and perhaps more significant generally.
1948 Lactogenesis . [ see galactopoieseis (galacto-)]
1969 S. R. Wellings in Reynolds & Folley Lactogenesis 5Lactogenesis may be defined as the process by which full lactation is initiated in an already prepared mammary gland.
1933 Proc. Soc. Exper. Biol. &Med. XXI. 300We have never observed milk secretion in normal or ovariectomized virgin guinea pigs uninjected with the *lactogenic hormone.
1946 J. F. Fulton Howell'sTextbk. Physiol. (ed. 15) liv. 1209The lactogenic activity of pituitary extracts was first shown by Stricker and Grüter in 1928.
1952 Lactogenic . [ see lactogen above]
1969 A. T. Cowie in Reynolds & Folley Lactogenesis 159,I now turn to the rabbit, the species in which the lactogenic role of the anterior pituitary was first discovered.
1969 R. Denamur in Ibid. 60Thus, *lactogenically prolactin modifies the polyribosomes by increasing their number in the cell.
1878 A. Hamilton Nerv. Dis. 335The syrup of the *lacto⁓phosphate of lime.
1864 Reader No. 86. 239/2A new albuminoidal substance found in milk..*lacto-proteine.
1858 Simmonds Dict. Trade,*Lactoscope,..an instrument invented by M. Donne, of Paris, for ascertaining the opacity of milk, and thus estimating the richness of the fluid in cream.
1884 Health Exhib. Catal. 25/1Milk Thermometers..*Lacto-Thermometer.
1907 Practitioner June 845 The *lacto-vegetarian diet..lessens auto-intoxication.
1929 Encycl. Brit. VII. 359/1A lacto-vegetarian diet which permits the free use of milk and eggs.
1951 News Chron. 13 Dec. 3/2Man was not designed for a purely vegetable diet. There was no objection whatever to lacto-vegetarian diet (this includes milk and eggs).
1940 Nature 7 Dec. 726/2 It. .looks as if the Briton's dietary will gradually shift, at least during the war years, towards *lactovegetarianism.
1927 Jrnl. Chem. Soc. 546Barium lactobionate was methylated in a manner similar to that already mentioned.
1964 Chem. Abstr. LXI. 16697Ca lactobionate..may be used under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act as a firming agent in dry pudding mixes.
1889 Jrnl. Chem. Soc. LVI. 485Lactobionic acid, C12H22O12, is obtained when milk-sugar (1 part) dissolved in water (7 parts) is treated with bromine (1 part).
Ibid. 486Lactobionic acid is decomposed into galactose and gluconic acid when warmed with dilute mineral acids.
1967 Kirk & Othmer Encycl. Chem. Technol. (ed. 2) XIII. 571The sequestrant and emulsifying properties of lactobionic acid suggest a commercial potential, especially in the food industry, for this product.
1898 Jrnl. Chem. Soc. LXXIV. ii. 509When silicon tetrachloride is heated with mandelonitrile or lactonitrile, silicic acid and complex tarry products are formed.
1935 Chem. Abstr. XXIX. 814For prepg. an aliphatic cyanohydrin such as lactonitrile, reaction is effected between HCN and an aliphatic aldehyde or ketone such as acetaldehyde.
1961 Ibid. LV. 8268The alkyl and aralkyl α-hydroxy nitriles, i.e. lactonitrile,.., are effective reagents for the extn. of Au and Ag by cyanidation... Crude lactonitrile which is a by⁓product from the manuf. of acrylonitrile is inexpensive and very efficient. [ etc.]
1896 Jrnl. R.Microsc. Soc. 481M. J. Amann recommends the following fluids for preserving and imbedding mosses..(1) Lactophenol.
1929 W. R. Taylor in C. E. McClung Handbk. Microsc. Technique iv. 139A solution (Lactophenol) composed of lactic acid ..is very serviceable and may be used for mounting various materials, softening dried material (especially algæ) or decalcifying specimens. [ etc.]
1970 Watsonia VIII. 140 Pollen grains stained with cotton blue in lactophenol.
1940 Jrnl. Amer. DieteticAssoc. XVI. 222/1Meat was not served, and the diets were essentially *lacto-ovo vegetarian.
1975 New Yorker 17 Mar. 32/3 Technically, I'm a lacto-ovo-vegetarian, which means that I eat milk products and eggs as well as vegetables.
1977 Washington Post 23 June e1/5 The low-calorie, low-sodium, low-cholesterol diet at the 40-acre ranch is lacto-ovo-vegetarian, made up of lots of whole grains, fresh fruits and vegetables with some eggs and milk products.
1987 Times 6 Feb. 11/6 Even people who are lacto-ovo vegetarians fail to meet normal dietary goals.
1943 H. Theorell & Å Åkeson in Arkiv för Kemi,Mineral. ochGeol. XVII. B. vii. 1Agner's peroxidase, that occurs in cells belonging to the myeloic system, should be referred to as ‘myelo-peroxidase’, while the milk peroxidase should be called ‘*lacto-peroxidase’.
1970 Biochem. Jrnl. CXVII. 779Lactoperoxidase.., an enzyme present in various mammalian glands and in their secretions, catalyses the oxidation of thiocyanate by hydrogen peroxide.
1987 Ibid. CCXLVII. 147The haem prosthetic group of lactoperoxidase can be prepared from the enzyme in high yield by reductive cleavage with mercaptoethanol in 8m urea.
1912 Stedman Med. Dict. (ed. 2) 475/2*Lactovegetarian, one who lives on a mixed diet of milk and milk products, eggs and vegetables, but eschews meat.
1977 C. McFadden Serial xv. 37/1Marsha Wilson had become a lacto-vegetarian since Kate had last seen her.
1987 Bodybuilding Oct. 85/2 There's the lacto vegetarian who includes all dairy products in his/her diet except eggs.
lacto-
before vowels, lac-, word-forming element meaning "milk," from Latin lac (genitive lactis) "milk," from PIE root *glakt- (see lactation).
ORIGIN: from Latin lact- , lac milk: see -o- .
lacto-
combining form.
milk, as in lactometer.
lactic acid, as in lactobacillus.
Also, lact- before vowels.
[< Latin lac, lactis]
lacto-
— see lact-
— see lact-
lacto-lact- (without the connecting vowel)
Prefix
- denoting a connection to milk.
Etymology
From Latin lac (“milk”).
Synonyms
Derived terms
English words prefixed with lacto-