hyaline
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
From Latin hyalinus, from Koine Greek ὑάλινος (huálinos), from ὕαλος (húalos, “glass”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈhaɪəlɪn/, /ˈhaɪəliːn/
Audio (UK) (file) Audio (UK) (file)
Adjective
hyaline (comparative more hyaline, superlative most hyaline)
- Glassy, transparent; amorphous.
- 1791, Erasmus Darwin, The Economy of Vegetation, J. Johnson, p. 117:
- And, as below she braids her hyaline hair, / Eyes her soft smiles reflected in the air […] .
- 1974, Guy Davenport, Tatlin!:
- They bathed shivering in the cold waves, green hyaline swells in which they stood to the hips savage, intimate, comradely.
- 1791, Erasmus Darwin, The Economy of Vegetation, J. Johnson, p. 117:
Derived terms
Translations
Noun
hyaline (countable and uncountable, plural hyalines)
- (poetic) Anything glassy, translucent or transparent; the sea or sky.
- 1667, John Milton, “Book VII”, in Paradise Lost. […], London: […] [Samuel Simmons], […], OCLC 228722708; republished as Paradise Lost in Ten Books: […], London: Basil Montagu Pickering […], 1873, OCLC 230729554:
- The clear hyaline, the glassy sea.
- 1844, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, A Rhapsody of Life's Progress
- Our blood runs amazed 'neath the calm hyaline.
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- (zoology, anatomy) A clear translucent substance in tissues.
- (biochemistry) The main constituent of the walls of hydatid cysts; a nitrogenous body, which, by decomposition, yields a dextrogyrate sugar, susceptible to alcoholic fermentation.
- 1880, Arthur Gamgee, A Text-book of the physiological chemistry […]
- where a villus comes next to a gland the short cubical cells of the gland may be traced into the columnar cells of the villus , the hyaline border becoming more marked
- 1880, Arthur Gamgee, A Text-book of the physiological chemistry […]
Latin
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