Transudation

Word TRANSUDATION
Character 12
Hyphenation tran su da tion
Pronunciations N/A

Definitions and meanings of "Transudation"

What do we mean by transudation?

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word transudation. Define transudation, transudation synonyms, transudation pronunciation, transudation translation, English dictionary definition of transudation.

Liquid from a girl's vagina. A synonym for cunny juice. Urban Dictionary

Synonyms and Antonyms for Transudation

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The word "transudation" in example sentences

Onopordinis_, but proportionably more elongate and less convex; rostrum and thorax longer; pilosity of the body underneath much thinner and shorter; thighs thicker, more clavate, the anterior evidently costate-rugose underneath; without whitish marks on the elytra, and without that layer of light-brown earth-like pollinose transudation which is often wanting in rubbed specimens of _Larinus ❋ Various (N/A)

In the normal transudation [2] the substances on which the coagulation of the blood depends pass through the vessel wall to a very slight extent, but the exudate may contain the coagulable material in such amounts that it easily clots. ❋ William Thomas Councilman (N/A)

This loss is one of simple transudation, increasing as the powers of life decrease. ❋ Various (N/A)

If we do not dilute it sufficiently, it is diluted in the stomach by transudation of water in the stomach, until the required reduction for its absorption; the current then sets in toward the blood, and passes into the circulating canals by the veins. ❋ Joel Dorman Steele (N/A)

There is edema of the ureal tract, apparently from transudation of serum. ❋ Various (N/A)

[2] By transudation is meant the constant interchange between the blood and the tissue fluid. ❋ William Thomas Councilman (N/A)

Afterwards, as the weather becomes hotter, incisions are made through the bark, to assist the transudation of the juice. ❋ Various (N/A)

The cornea arises from the sclerotic tunic, the uvea and secundina take their origin from the pia mater, and the conjunctiva from a thin pellicle or membrane which covers the exterior of the cranium and is nourished by a transudation of the blood through the coronal suture. ❋ Henry Ebenezer Handerson (N/A)

Some of the air which enters the lung gets from the bronchial tubes into the blood-vessels by transudation, for there is no direct communication between them; and this air, penetrating the body, rapidly cools the blood throughout the vessels. ❋ Charles McRae (N/A)

_ During the acute attack, the vitreous may become slightly turbid by transudation of serum from the vessel of the ciliary body and the chorioid and may become filled with fibrin. ❋ Various (N/A)

How it passed through the lungs was a problem: probably by a continuous transudation. ❋ Unknown (1921)

Medullated nerve fibers, when examined in the fresh condition, frequently present a beaded or varicose appearance: this is due to manipulation and pressure causing the oily matter to collect into drops, and in consequence of the extreme delicacy of the primitive sheath, even slight pressure will cause the transudation of the fatty matter, which collects as drops of oil outside the membrane. ❋ Unknown (1918)

Exosmosis means the passage of fluid from within outward, and is a process constantly taking place in health; while transudation takes place because the blood is watery and the tissues are feeble and permeable, permitting the serum and watery elements of the blood to pass into certain cavities, where they accumulate. ❋ Ray Vaughn Pierce (1877)

While the sleazy structures of the lymphatic temperament are favorable to the functions of transudation, exhalation, and mutual diffusion of liquids, the sanguine, as its name indicates, is adapted to promote the circulation of the blood, to favor nutrition and reproduction. ❋ Ray Vaughn Pierce (1877)

This is followed by the formation of a coating of coagulated fibrin on the diseased pleura and the transudation of serum which collects in the chest. ❋ Charles B. Michener (1877)

The blood of the pregnant mare contains an excess of water and a smaller proportion of albumen and red globules, and when this condition is still further aggravated by poor feeding and other unhygienic conditions there is developed the tendency to liquid transudation from the vessels and dropsy. ❋ Charles B. Michener (1877)

By means of this transudation or diosmosis the exchange of fluids takes place without difficulty. ❋ Ernst Heinrich Philipp August Haeckel (1876)

Just so far as we can recognize the ordinary modes of operation of the common forces of nature, -- gravity, cohesion, elasticity, transudation, chemical action, and the rest, -- we see the so-called vital acts in the light of a larger range of known facts and familiar analogies. ❋ Oliver Wendell Holmes (1851)

After [eating] [that bitch] out, there was transudate [all over my face]. ❋ Bob To The E (2010)

Cross Reference for Transudation

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What does transudation mean?

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