xeno- 或 xen-
pref.(前缀)
语源
pref.(前缀)
- Stranger; foreigner:
表示“陌生人”,“外国人”:
xenophobia.
恐外症,陌生恐怖 - Strange; foreign; different:
表示“陌生的”,“外来的”,“不同的”:
xenolith.
捕虏岩
语源
- New Latin
现代拉丁语 - from Greek
源自 希腊语 - from xenos [stranger] * see ghos-ti-
源自 xenos [陌生人] *参见 ghos-ti-
xeno- or (before a vowel) xen-
combining form
indicating something strange, different, or foreign
⇒
xenogamy
Origin
from Greek xenos strangexeno-
Word Origin
1
a combining form meaning “alien,” “strange,” “guest,” used in the formation of compound words:
xenogamy, xenolith.
Also, especially before a vowel, xen-.
Origin
combining form of Greek xénos stranger, guest (noun); alien, foreign, strange (adj.)
Related Words
- axenic
- euxenite
- pyroxene
- xenobiotic
- xenocryst
- xenocurrency
xeno-a word element meaning 'alien', 'strange', 'foreign', as in xenogenesis.
Also, (before a vowel), xen-. [Greek, combining form of xenos (noun) stranger, guest and xenos (adjective) foreign, alien]
xeno-
combining form
⇨ see xen-
combining form
⇨ see xen-
xeno-
combining form
- relating to a foreigner or foreigners表示“外国人”:
-
xenophobia.
- ■ other; different in origin表示“异”, “外来的”, “陌生的”:
-
xenograft.
词源
from Greek xenos 'stranger, foreigner', (adjective) 'strange'.
1974 Brit. Jrnl. Cancer XXX. 304/1Gel filtration was used to show that the tumour specific *xenoantibody responsible for protection was not IgM but was in the IgG fraction.
1984 Human Immunol. X. 57Xenoantibodies to idiotypes of the anti-HLA-A2, A28 MoAb CR11-351 were isolated from an antiserum raised in rabbit {hash}81.
1975 Nature 24 Apr. 716/2 An important characteristic of the immune system is the ability to discriminate between antigens expressed on normal tissues within the individual and the many foreign antigens expressed on normal tissues of other species (*xenoantigens) and even on normal tissues of members of the same species (alloantigens).
1984 Jrnl. Immunol. CXXXII. 2522/1An increase in specific antigenic activity for the Rana-specific xenoantigen.
1973 Tissue Antigens III. 5/1 Some of the eluted fractions possessed both alloantigenic and *xenoantigenic activity.
Ibid. 18/2Strain-discriminating effects of *xenoantisera were reported..over thirty years ago.
1978 Nature 26 Oct. 711/1 Experiments with xenoantiserum to murine tissues provided the first, fortuitous indication that Thy-1 included an hitherto unrecognised specificity.
1885 Stand. Nat. Hist. (1888) V. 66The geographical distribution of the Edentates... To America belong the *xenarthral or many-jointed forms.
1901 W. M. Wheeler in Amer. Naturalist July 535*Xenobiosis... The best-known guest ant is the European Formicoxenus nitidulus.
1965 H. S. Mason et al. in FederationProc. XXIV. 1172 (heading)Microsomal mixed-function oxidations: the metabolism of *xenobiotics.
Ibid. ,We would like to call the components of this chemical environment which are foreign to the metabolic network of an organism ‘xenobiotic’ compounds.
1975 Williams & Wilson Biologist's Guide toPrinc. & TechniquesPract. Biochem. i. 13In order to study the metabolism of a xenobiotic, it is advantageous to administer it in an isotopically-labelled form.
1981 Internat. Jrnl. Environ.Stud. XVII. 11/2Many xenobiotic substances reduce blood concentrations of one or more vitamins.
1920 A. Holmes Nomencl.Petrol. 241*xenoblast, a term applied to crystals which have grown during metamorphism without the development of their characteristic faces.
1962 Xenoblast . [ see idioblast 3]
1931 A. Johannsen Descr. Petrogr. Igneous Rocks I. 232*Xenoblastic, a texture in metamorphic rocks corresponding to the xenomorphic in igneous rocks. The crystals lack proper crystal faces.
1980 Mineral. Mag. XLIII. 781/1In thin-section all the felsic grains are seen to be xenoblastic.
1965 E. Weber in Rogger & Weber European Right 507Everywhere Eminescu looked..he saw foreigners and cryptoforeigners; the intelligentsia, recruited from men who had inherited their character and ideas from Greek or Bulgarian fore⁓bears; the ruling Liberals, who drew their manners and policies from the Seine, the Spree, and the Bosphorus... Altogether one vast *xenocracy.
1975 H. Luke in K. M. Setton Hist. Crusades III. xi. 394While it is unlikely that the Cypriote peasantry under the Lusignan kingdom were politically worse off..than the peasantry of other Near Eastern countries.., it is not surprising that by the end of the Venetian occupation they had come to conceive..a profound hatred of the Latin xenocracy.
1894 W. J. Sollas in Trans. R. IrishAcad. XXX. 493As a distinctive appelation appropriate to the crystals, both of pyroxene and of plagioclase felspar, which have found their way from the gabbro into the granophyre, the term ‘*xenocrysts’ may be employed. Correspondingly included fragments of the whole rock may be called ‘xenoliths’.
1964 G. A. Joplin Petrogr. Austral. Igneous Rocks ii. 26Xenocrysts commonly show some resorption or corona indicating that they have reacted with the magma.
1983 Jrnl. Geol. XCI. 277Xenocrysts and xenoliths from three Ithaca kimberlite localities are consistent with derivation from mantle depths of less than 150 km.
1963 Amer. Mineralogist XLVIII. 172Classification of Kerguelen rocks is to a large extent dependent on the amount of *xenocrystal material present.
1981 Jrnl. GeophysicalRes. LXXXVI. 10515This particular granite cannot be a primary magma... It is a possible product of partial fusion of pelitic rocks between about 20 km and 40 km depth..and xenocrystal muscovite or sillimanite from the source rocks.
1978 Nature 19 Oct. 640/1 The phlogopite is derived from the parental magma or its derivatives and is not a *xenocrystic phase.
1947 Anales del Instituto de Medicina Regional (Tucuman) II. 60 The authors describe..artificial *xenodiagnosis for cases in which it is not possible to perform it directly upon patients.
1976 Nature 15 July 215/2 Using only male bugs of a susceptible stock for xenodiagnosis should enhance the sensitivity of this diagnostic test.
1955 O Hospital (Rio de Janeiro) XLVII/187 The authors make a comparison between the positivity of *xeno-diagnostic tests performed in two ways.
1974 R. Zeledón in K. Elliott et al. Trypanosomiasis & Leishmaniasis 58New xenodiagnostic tests in an endemic area of Chagas' disease in Costa Rica.
1877 Darwin Lett. (1903) II. 413Some such terms as autogamy, *xenogamy, etc.
1870 Huxley Pres. Addr. Brit. Assoc. ,Rep. p. lxxvii,The term Heterogenesis..has..been used in a different sense, and M. Milne-Edwards has therefore substituted for it *Xenogenesis.
Ibid. p. lxxxv,The analogy of pathological modification..is in favour of the *xenogenetic origin of microzymes.
1901 Dorland Med. Dict. (ed. 2),*Xenogenous, caused by a foreign body, or originating outside the organism.
1913 Ibid. (ed. 7) adds 2.Formed or developed in the host: a term applied to toxins formed by the action of stimuli on the cells of the host.
1978 Amer. Speech LIII. 67Samarin would call the event of persons speaking in a language unknown to them *xenoglossia, something different from glossolalia.
1981 Times Lit. Suppl. 3 July 765/3The traditional view was that, while at Corinth glossolalia had occurred, meaning that there were lexically non-communicative utterances, at Pentecost what occurred was xenoglossia, utterance in an actual foreign language.
1914 A. Teixeira de Mattos tr. Maeterlinck's Unknown Guest iii. 101*Xenoglossy is well known not to be unusual in automatic writing; sometimes even the ‘automatist’ speaks or writes languages of which he is completely ignorant.
1932 I. Emerson tr. E. Bozzano (title)Polyglot mediumship (xenoglossy).
1980 Brit. Med. Jrnl. 9 Aug. 432/2The investigators are reported to regard her xeno-glossy (ability to speak a foreign language without having learnt it) as a truly paranormal experience.
1961 Nature 25 Mar. 1024/2 Grafts between species..of less general interest..have been called *xenografts or heterografts.
1974 R. M. Kirk et al. Surgery ii. 35A xenograft..is poorly tolerated by the recipient.
1977 Proc. R.Soc. Med. LXX. 480/2A xenograft in one patient was unsuccessful.
1984 Times 21 Aug. 4/1 Surgeons have a choice of artificial valves, or those made from human or animal tissue. The latter, xenografts, are silent and rendered rejection-proof.
1978 D. Christie-Murray Voices from Gods xii. 167There appears to be no evidence of genuine, responsive *xenolalia (that is, intelligent conversation carried on in a recognized language completely unknown to the speaker) in any native culture studied by anthropologists.
1981 Times 8 Oct. 15/5 There is a distinction between glossolalia (paranormal speaking in tongues) and xenolalia (paranormal speaking in allegedly foreign languages).
1844 Dana Min. (1868) 374*Xenolite..resembles fibrolite..excepting in the high specific gravity.
1894 *Xenolith . [ see xenocryst above]
1942 . [ see metasomatize v.]
1956 ‘H. MacDiarmid’ Stony Limits & Scots Unbound 41Ultra-basic xenoliths that make men look midges.
1975 Nature 10 Apr. 489/1 Xenoliths thought to represent material from the deeper parts of the upper mantle are brought to the surface in kimberlite magmas.
1900 Q. Jrnl. Geol. Soc. LVI. 665The whole of the cliffs around Annestown Bay are composed of the widespread pink and greenish *xenolithic felsites.
1930 Peach & Horne Geol. Scotl. ii. 67Grey igneous gneiss is interposed.. and is xenolithic. One of the pale xenoliths was found to consist of malacolite..and green hornblende.
1980 Sci. Amer. May 97/1With the exception of xenolithic..fragments of mantle that are occasionally brought to the surface by kimberlite pipes and some basalt formations, direct sampling of the upper mantle is impossible.
1879 K. Hillebrand in 19thCent. Oct. 626Germany received the first caresses of this strange *xenomania from the hands of youthful Carlyle and old Coleridge.
1887 Saintsbury Hist. Elizab. Lit. iv. 136No writer of the period had such a command of pure English, unadulterated by xenomania and unweakened by purism, as Daniel.
1879 Daily News 30 Sept. 5/1 Are we all *Xenomaniacs?
1891 Illustr. Lond. News 7 Feb. 168/2Sir Arthur Sullivan was never the least bit of a xenomaniac.
1888 Hatch in Teall Brit. PetrographyGloss. 423Allotriomorphic, a term applied by Rosenbusch..in contradistinction to idiomorphic. It is synonymous with *xenomorphic.
1905 E. S. Salmon in Ann. Bot. Jan. 127To describe cases where a form of a Fungus which is specialized to certain host-plants..proves able to infect injured parts of a strange host, I propose the terms *xenoparasite and *xenoparasitism.
1934 Webster, *Xenophile, -phil adjs.
1945 W. Plomer Dorking Thigh 10And in fancy dress she lingers With a locket in her fingers Containing a curl from That xenophil Greek.
1948 Penguin New Writing XXXIV. 128 New York and Los Angeles seem to be replacing Paris as the goal of Colombian xenophiles.
1968 P. B. Austin On being Swedish xx. 149Almost in spite of herself, she becomes a xenophile.
1959 Times 3 Dec. 15/7 Among the subjects covered by books in our stock are X-rays, *xenophilia, . [ etc.]
1964 New Statesman 1 May 694/1 The uniters are..more prone to xenophilia. Literature being the least international of the arts, those who wish to infuse it with music and colour tend to be internationalists.
1982 Times 7 Aug. 8/5 When will Americans realise how *xenophiliac their short order cuisine is—hamburgers..which Hamburg would not understand, French fries incomprehensible to the French.
1974 Encycl. Brit. Macropædia X. 309/2Tension between the xenophobic (fear of strangers) and *xenophilic (love of strangers) in postexilic Judaism was finally resolved some two centuries later.
1912 W. Sickert in English Review Apr. 147Lest the writer be accused of *Xenophilism.
1984 New Yorker 16 Jan. 32/2 Even the most *xenophilous among us may feel a twinge of alarm.
1898 Q. Jrnl. Microsc. Sci. June 308No Stromboid, Naticoid, or *Xenophoran molluscs have been found hitherto in any fresh water that is known.
1935 A. F. Buddington in Econ. Geol. XXX. 209The writer therefore proposes the term *xenothermal for these deposits,..suggestive of the peculiar textures for the normal high⁓temperature mineral assemblages involved, of the abnormal association of high temperature with shallow depth, and of the ‘telescoped’ character of many of the deposits.
1976 Nature 10 June 482/2 The tin mineralisation of Missouri bears a resemblance to the subvolcanic (xenothermal) deposits of Japan.
1973 J. A. Levy in Science 14 Dec. 1151/2The results show that this NZB type virus is endogenous in other strains of mice and is *xenotropic; that is, it grows only in cells foreign to the host.
1978 Nature 30 Mar. 456/2 Defective type C RNA tumour viruses which are genetic recombinants between ecotropic and xenotropic viruses have been described and suggested to be the real transforming agents during the course of viral-induced lymphatic leukaemia.
1974 Ibid. 22 Mar. 279/3Another example of *xenotropism is the endogenous feline virus which when activated replicates in human cells.
1982 Jrnl. Virology XLIII. 472 (heading)Monoclonal antibody to spleen focus-forming virus-encoded gp52 provides a probe for the amino-terminal region of retroviral envelope proteins that confers dual tropism and xenotropism.
1885 Stand. Nat. Hist. (1888) V. 50The Kabassous, or *Xenurines, have the third as well as the fourth and fifth metacarpals abbreviated and broad.
1954 R. A. Heinlein in Mag. of Fantasy &Sci. Fiction July 90,I have never taken any interest in *xenobiology.
1961 Science 21 July 223/1 The proper word, as any science-fiction reader should know, for the study of, say, extraterrestrial biology is ‘xenobiology’, not ‘exobiology’... I am not certain that I coined the term; it is quite possible that I saw it used elsewhere, in fiction or non-fiction, and made use of it. [ Citing Heinlein]
1983 Nature 13 Jan. 106/2 The almost-virgin xeno- prefix should be used to designate extraterrestrial entities.., concepts and subdisciplines (for example, xeno-biology, xenosociology), and exo- reserved for life outside of but native to Earth.
1954 R. A. Heinlein in Mag. of Fantasy &Sci. Fiction May 60Once the *xenobiologists got their hands on Lummox they would never let him go.
1979 F. Pohl Jem ix. 138Professor D. Dalehouse was now a name to conjure with among xenobiologists.
1984 I. Asimov Banquets of Black Widowers 46Exobiologist, Mr. Trumbull... Personally, I prefer ‘xenobiologist’... Either way it's the study of life on other worlds.
1954 R. A. Heinlein in Mag. of Fantasy &Sci. Fiction May 27,I mean to major in *xenology and exotic biology in college.
1983 R. A. Freitas in Nature 13 Jan. 106/1Xenobiology axiomatizes life, hence also fails. The most suitable word must be least limiting, suggesting the rootless forms exology and xenology.
1954 R. A. Heinlein in Mag. of Fantasy &Sci. Fiction May 27*Xenologists have found that high types, equivalent to humans, always have three characteristics: speech centers, manipulation, and from these two, record keeping.
1957 ‘T. Sturgeon’ Thunder & Roses 189The xenologists and e-t mineralogists.
1991 Times Educ. Suppl. 15 Feb. 30/4A xenologist on a distant planet begins to learn that civilisation doesn't necessarily mean technological sophistication, big buildings, libraries and war.
xeno-
before vowels, xen-, word-forming element meaning "strange, foreign; stranger, foreigner," from Greek xeno-, comb. form of xenos "a guest, stranger, foreigner, refugee, guest-friend, one entitled to hospitality," cognate with Latin hostis (see guest, n.). "The term was politely used of any one whose name was unknown" [Liddell & Scott].
xeno-
combining form.
a stranger: Xenophobia = fear of strangers.
foreign, strange, as in xenolith, xenomorphic.
[< Greek xénos guest]
xeno-
combining form
see xen-
see xen-
xeno-xen-
Prefix
- Having to do with foreigners, as in xenophilia, or more commonly, xenophobia.
- From a foreign place, as in xenolith
Etymology
from Ancient Greek ξένος (xénos, “alien”).
Derived terms
English words prefixed with xeno-