different between contractility vs contraction

contractility

English

Noun

contractility (countable and uncountable, plural contractilities)

  1. The condition of being able to contract or shrink (used especially of muscles).
  2. The extent to which something contracts or shrinks.
  3. (physiology) The performance of cardiac muscle. (Can we add an example for this sense?)

Derived terms

Related terms

  • contractile

contractility From the web:

  • what contractility mean
  • contractility what does it mean
  • what is contractility of the heart
  • what increases contractility of the heart
  • what is contractility in muscles
  • what does contractility of the heart mean
  • what is contractility in pharmacology
  • what is contractility in cardiac output


contraction

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Old French contraction, from Latin contracti?. Equivalent to contract +? -ion

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /k?n?t?æk.??n/, /k?n?t?æk.??n/
  • (US) IPA(key): /k?n?t?æk.??n/
  • Rhymes: -æk??n

Noun

contraction (countable and uncountable, plural contractions)

  1. A reversible reduction in size.
  2. (economics) A period of economic decline or negative growth.
    The country's economic contraction was caused by high oil prices.
  3. (biology) A shortening of a muscle during its use.
  4. (medicine) A strong and often painful shortening of the uterine muscles prior to or during childbirth.
  5. (linguistics) A process whereby one or more sounds of a free morpheme (a word) are lost or reduced, such that it becomes a bound morpheme (a clitic) that attaches phonologically to an adjacent word.
    In English didn't, that's, and wanna, the endings -n't, -'s, and -a arose by contraction.
  6. (English orthography) A word with omitted letters replaced by an apostrophe, usually resulting from the above process.
    "Don't" is a contraction of "do not."
  7. A shorthand symbol indicating an omission for the purpose of brevity.
  8. (medicine) The process of contracting a disease.
  9. (phonetics) Syncope, the loss of sounds from within a word.
  10. The acquisition of something, generally negative.
    Our contraction of debt in this quarter has reduced our ability to attract investors.
  11. (medicine) A distinct stage of wound healing, wherein the wound edges are gradually pulled together.

Antonyms

  • expansion
  • dilatation

Derived terms

Related terms

  • contract
  • contractation
  • contractive
  • haustral contraction

Translations

See also

  • omission
  • Category:English contractions
  • contraction on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

French

Etymology

Borrowed from Latin contractio, contractionem.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /k??.t?ak.sj??/

Noun

contraction f (plural contractions)

  1. contraction

Related terms

  • contracter
  • contrat

contraction From the web:

  • what contractions feel like
  • what contractions look like
  • what contraction is made from will not
  • what contractions compose a cardiac cycle
  • what contractions look like on paper
  • what contraction mean
  • what contraction is made from we have
  • what contraction words
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