sidero- 或 sider-
pref.(前缀)
语源
pref.(前缀)
- Iron:
铁:
siderolite.
石铁陨石
语源
- Greek sidēro-
希腊语 sidēro- - from sidēros [iron]
源自 sidēros [铁]
sidero- or (before a vowel) sider-
combining form
indicating iron
⇒
siderolite
Origin
from Greek sidērossidero-1
Word Origin
1
a combining form meaning “iron,” used in the formation of compound words:
siderolite.
Also, especially before a vowel, sider-.
Origin
< Greek sidēro-, combining form of sídēros iron
sidero-2
1
a combining form meaning “star,” “constellation,” used in the formation of compound words:
siderostat.
Origin
< Latin sīder- (stem of sīdus) star-group + -o-
Related Words
- siderocyte
- siderography
- siderolite
- siderophile
- sideroscope
- siderostat
sidero-a word element meaning 'iron', 'steel', as in siderolite.
Also, (before vowels), sider-. [Greek, combining form of sidēros iron]
sidero-
combining form
⇨ see sider-
combining form
⇨ see sider-
sidero-1
combining form
- of or relating to the stars表示“(与)星(有关)的”:
-
siderostat.
词源
from Latin sidus, sider- 'star'.
sidero-2
combining form
- of or relating to iron表示“(与)铁(有关)的”:
-
siderophore.
词源
from Greek sidēros 'iron'.
1794 Kirwan Elem. Min. I. 109It may be inferred that braun spar, or *sidero-calcite, exhibits in its composition various gradations to or from the sparry iron ore.
1811 Pinkerton Petral. I. 127The sidero-calcite and ferri-calcite of Kirwan have little connection with the present subject.
1823 W. Phillips Min. (ed. 3) 210*Sideroclepte..is massive, translucent, of a yellowish green colour.
1820 J. Torrey in Amer. Jrnl. Sci. II. 176,I have just discovered a new mineral, or one which I cannot find described. It is a compound of metallic iron and plumbago... I have called it *Sidero-graphite.
1896 Chester Dict. Min. ,Siderographite,..considered a native compound of iron and graphite, but probably a furnace product.
1811 Pinkerton Petral. I. 131It is so much impregnated with iron, that it belongs to the *sideromagnesian rocks.
1890 Amer. Jrnl. Sci. CXL. 202Associated with the *sideronatrite..is a grayish white laminated mineral, ferronatrite, which is also often intermixed through the whole mass of the sideronatrite.
1935 J. W. Mellor ComprehensiveTreat. Inorg. &Theoret. Chem. XIV. 345Sideronatrite occurs in orange-yellow or straw-yellow, crystalline masses of fine, fibrous structure which separate into thin splinters.
1975 Nature 5 June 472/1 Alteration has produced haematite and goethite on the outer parts of the concretions, whereas the inner parts contain jarosite, gypsum, baryte, celestine and sideronatrite.
1880 H. C. Lewis in Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia XXXII. 255The name of *Siderophyllite..has been given in allusion to the large percentage of iron which it contains.
1967 Mineral. Abstr. XVIII. 142/1High temperature metasomatically altered granites of Jurassic and Cretaceous age locally include fayalite and siderophyllite greisens in association with Sn deposits. [ in Upper Kolyma, Russian S.F.S.R.]
1825 Brewster's Edin. Jrnl. Sci. II. 372He described *Sideroschisolite as occurring in small simple three-sided and six-sided pyramids. [ Dr. Wernekingk]
1868 Watts Dict. Chem. V. 240Sideroschisolite, a ferroso-ferrous silicate, occurring..in Brazil, in hexagonal crystals.
1897 Mineral. Mag. XI. 335*Siderotil... FeSO4 + 5H2O. Idria, Carniola.
1920 Amer. Jrnl. Sci. CCL. 229Melanterite, either natural or artificial, is commonly coated with a white powder of siderotil and the fine powder will dehydrate after standing for some months to the pentahydrate. [ of the former]
1964 Amer. Mineralogist XLIX. 820From a study of natural and synthetic iron sulfates, it is concluded that the name siderotil should be applied to (Fe,X)SO4.5H2O, where X is any cation or group of cations individually less abundant than Fe. The pure compound probably does not exist in nature, but several examples of the cuprian variety are known.
1961 Amer. Jrnl. ClinicalPath. XXXV. 338/1The patients suffered from an anemia which was resistant to all forms of therapy except blood transfusion and had an erythroid hyperplasia of the bone marrow with a conspicuous accumulation of iron-staining granules in the developing erythrocytes. Similar instances have been described..under the term ‘*sideroachrestic anemia’.
1970 A. E. Lewis Princ. Hematol. xiii. 205Sideroachrestic anemia is a very rare, hereditary anemia, refractory to treatment with iron, vitamins, or folic acid.
1961 Chem. Abstr. LV. 23684Sideromycins, sideramines, and other unidentified Fe-contg. biol. active substances are taken together as a group called *siderochromes.
1976 Nature 19 Aug. 722/2 Microbial iron-transport compounds, or siderochromes are of two general structural types, the phenolates and the hydroxamates.
1875 Knight Dict. Mech. 2174/2*Siderograph.
1819 ( title),Specimens and Description of Perkins and Fairman's Patent *Siderographic Plan to prevent Forgery . [ of bank-notes]
1820 J. Perkins in Trans. Soc. Arts XXXVIII. 47We, the proprietors of the Siderographic art.
1847 Webster, *Siderographist, one who engraves steel plates, or performs work by means of such plates.
1820 Gentl. Mag. XC. i. 349*Siderography.
1899 Edin. Rev. Oct. 326Intermediate or *siderolithic varieties consist of an amalgam of metal and stone.
1938 J. Waldenström in ActaMed. Scand. Suppl. XC. 395All these factors may lead to the same result, most suitably called *sideropenia.
1946 M. M. Wintrobe Clinical Hematol. (ed. 2) xii. 533Anemia was not present in all of his cases but low plasma iron (sideropenia) was consistently found.
1971 J. H. Dagg et al. in Goldberg & BrainRec. Adv. Haematol. ii. 107Sideropenia causes well-defined chemical and biochemical changes, and may be associated with the clinical tissue signs found in iron deficiency states.
1939 Acta Radiol. XX. (heading) 618The roentgenological diagnosis of *sideropenic dysphagia.
1971 J. H. Dagg et al. in Goldberg & BrainRec. Adv. Haematol. ii. 105An erythrocyte protoporphyrin level above 40·0 µg per 100 ml. erythrocytes and a transferrin saturation of less than 16 per cent taken together, allow a firm diagnosis of the sideropenic state without the necessity for marrow biopsy.
1970 Passmore & Robson Compan. Med. Stud. II. xxi. 11/1In lesions where there has been much haemorrhage, phagocytosis of iron pigment results in a pigmented stippling of the cytoplasm , and such cells are termed *siderophages. [ of macrophages]
1977 Lancet 30 July 244/1 No siderophages were found in the cerebrospinal fluid on the 10th day.
1923 *Siderophil . [ see lithophil(eadj. s.v. litho-]
1950 Rankama & Sahama Geochem. iv. 93It may be assumed that the typically siderophile elements..are enriched in the nickel-iron core of the Earth.
1954 A. Muir Goldschmidt's Geochem. 680The scarcity of all the platinum metals in the lithosphere is due to their extremely siderophil nature.
1977 Nature 20 Jan. 197/3 The siderophile and volatile elements on the Moon are depleted relative to the Earth and meteorites.
1971 C. B. Moore in B. Mason Handbk. Elemental Abundances in Meteorites xiv. 127Although by definition silicon is a lithophilic element, evidence also shows that under highly reducing conditions in meteorites it may also be *siderophilic.
1949 A. L. Schade et al. inArch. Biochem. XX. 170 (heading)Carbon dioxide in complex formation with iron and *siderophilin, the iron-binding component of human plasma.
1971 Nature 28 May 250/1 Transferrin (siderophilin) is a beta-globulin found universally in vertebrate serum.
1828–32 Webster s.v. ,*Sideroscope.
1837 Brewster Magnet. 352This apparatus, which he calls a sideroscope, is shewn in the annexed figure.
1970 Haematologia IV. 301 In spite of the active rhopheocytosis, ferritin aggregates (*siderosomes) were found in the erythroblasts only exceptionally.
1972 W. J. Williams et al. Hematology viii. 80/2Cells containing siderosomes or ‘iron bodies’ are usually reticulocytes.
1979 Experientia XXXV. 256/1 The hepatic increase of ferric deposits (ferritin, siderosomes and lipofuscin aggregates) more or less overloaded in iron in relatives of idiopathic hemochromatosis is well-known.
1897 tr. T. Ribot'sPsychol. of Emotions ii. ii. 213Every morbid manifestation of fear is immediately fitted with a Greek designation..and we have aïcmophobia, belenophobia..even *siderodromophobia (fear of railways).
1981 N.Y. Times 11 Feb. c2/1Four phobias that are likely to make life difficult Climacophobia (fear of stairs); Iophobia (fear of rust); Siderodromophobia (fear of railroad trains), and Triskaidekaphobia (fear of 13 people at table).
1973 C. E. Lankford in CRCCrit. Rev. Microbiol. II. 290/2In consideration of possible existence of functional ferrous-iron chelating compounds in the microbial world ,..the term siderochrome could become nondescriptive of functionally related compounds of microbial origin. A term such as *siderophore might be more appropriate. [ etc.]
1979 Nature 3 May 15/3 Enteric and other bacteria have been known for some time to synthesise low molecular weight siderophore molecules of high iron affinity.
1986 M. Kogut tr. Schlegel'sGen. Microbiol. vii. 263Microorganisms generally excrete siderophores only when the supply of iron is growth limiting.
1846 J. D. Dana Zooph. (1848) 519They graduate into the Sideropores on one side, and into the slender Pocillopores on the other. [ the Seriatopores]
1
ORIGIN: from Greek sidēros iron: see -o- .
2
ORIGIN: from Latin sider- , sidus star + -o- .
sidero-
I.
— see sider-
II.combining form
Etymology: Latin sider-, sidus star, constellation — more at sidereal
1. : star
< sideromancy >
< siderostat >
2. : sidereal
< siderograph >
I.
— see sider-
II.
1.
< sideromancy >
< siderostat >
2.
< siderograph >
sidero- 1
Prefix
- Related to stars or constellations, as sidereal relationships.
Etymology
From Latin sīdus, sideris, ("constellation").
sidero- 2
Prefix
- Related to iron or steel, as in siderosis (fibrosis caused by iron deposits).
Etymology
From Ancient Greek σίδηρος (sídēros, “iron”).