different between cylinder vs endodermis

cylinder

English

Etymology

From Middle French chilindre, cylindre, from Latin cylindrus, from Ancient Greek ????????? (kúlindros), from ??????? (kulínd?) "I roll or wallow" (intransitive). Doublet of calender.

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /?s?l?nd?(?)/
  • (US) IPA(key): /?s?l?nd?/, [?s?l??nd?]

Noun

cylinder (plural cylinders)

  1. (geometry) A surface created by projecting a closed two-dimensional curve along an axis intersecting the plane of the curve.
    When the two-dimensional curve is a circle, the cylinder is called a circular cylinder. When the axis is perpendicular to the plane of the curve, the cylinder is called a right cylinder. In non-mathematical usage, both right and circular are usually implied.
  2. (geometry) A solid figure bounded by a cylinder and two parallel planes intersecting the cylinder.
  3. Any object in the form of a circular cylinder.
    • 1898 — H. G. Wells, The War of the Worlds Ch.4
      A big greyish rounded bulk, the size, perhaps, of a bear, was rising slowly and painfully out of the cylinder.
  4. A cylindrical cavity or chamber in a mechanism, such as the counterpart to a piston found in a piston-driven engine.
  5. (automotive) The space in which a piston travels inside a reciprocating engine or pump.
  6. A container in the form of a cylinder with rounded ends for storing pressurized gas; a gas cylinder.
  7. An early form of phonograph recording, made on a wax cylinder.
  8. The part of a revolver that contains chambers for the cartridges.
  9. (computing) The corresponding tracks on a vertical arrangement of disks in a disk drive considered as a unit of data capacity.

Derived terms

  • cylinder head
  • cylindrical
  • fire on all cylinders
  • two-cylinder

Descendants

  • ? Japanese: ????? (shirind?)
  • ? Korean: ??? (sillindeo)

Translations

Verb

cylinder (third-person singular simple present cylinders, present participle cylindering, simple past and past participle cylindered)

  1. (transitive) To calender; to press (paper, etc.) between rollers to make it glossy.

See also

  • cylinder on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

Danish

Etymology

From Latin cylindrus, from Ancient Greek ????????? (kúlindros).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /sylen?r/, [sy?len??] or IPA(key): /sylend?r/, [sy?len?d??]

Noun

cylinder c (singular definite cylinderen, plural indefinite cylindere or cylindre)

  1. cylinder

Inflection

Further reading

  • cylinder on the Danish Wikipedia.Wikipedia da
  • Cylinder (geometri) on the Danish Wikipedia.Wikipedia da
  • Cylinder (fluidmekanik) on the Danish Wikipedia.Wikipedia da
  • Cylinder (motordel) on the Danish Wikipedia.Wikipedia da

Polish

Etymology

From Latin cylindrus, from Ancient Greek ????????? (kúlindros), from ??????? (kulínd?) "I roll or wallow" (intransitive).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /t?s??l?in.d?r/

Noun

cylinder m inan (diminutive cylinderek)

  1. top hat, high hat, cylinder hat, topper
  2. cylinder (any object in the form of a circular cylinder)
  3. (automotive) cylinder (space in which a piston travels inside a reciprocating engine or pump)

Declension

Derived terms

  • (verb) cylindrowa?
  • (adjectives) cylindrowy, cylindryczny
  • (adverb) cylindrycznie

Related terms

  • (noun) cylindroid

Further reading

  • cylinder in Wielki s?ownik j?zyka polskiego, Instytut J?zyka Polskiego PAN
  • cylinder in Polish dictionaries at PWN

Swedish

Etymology

From Latin cylindrus, not necessarily directly.

Noun

cylinder c

  1. (geometry) a cylinder
  2. (mechanics) a cylinder (part of an engine)
  3. a top hat

Declension

Related terms

  • cylinderformig
  • cylinderhatt
  • cylinderlås
  • cylinderpress
  • cylindervolym
  • cylindrisk

References

  • cylinder in Svenska Akademiens ordlista (SAOL)

cylinder From the web:

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  • what cylinders are dod on 5.3
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endodermis

English

Etymology

From endo- (within) +? dermis (skin)

Noun

endodermis

  1. (botany) In a plant stem or root, a cylinder of cells that separates the outer cortex from the central core. The endodermis controls flow of water and minerals within the plant. In most plants, this tissue is restricted to the roots.
  2. The deepest layer of the skin.

Related terms

  • endoderm

Translations

Anagrams

  • modernised, semnoderid

endodermis From the web:

  • what endodermis meaning
  • endodermis what does it mean
  • endodermis what does it do
  • what is endodermis in plants
  • what is endodermis made up of
  • what is endodermis and hypodermis
  • what is endodermis and epidermis
  • what is endodermis in plant anatomy
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