different between insolate vs insonate
insolate
English
Etymology
From Latin insolatus, past participle of insolare (“to expose to the sun”), from in- (“in”) + sol (“the sun”).
Verb
insolate (third-person singular simple present insolates, present participle insolating, simple past and past participle insolated)
- (transitive) To dry in, or expose to, the sun's rays; to ripen or prepare by such exposure.
- (Can we find and add a quotation of Johnson to this entry?)
Anagrams
- elations, toenails
insolate From the web:
- what insulates the axon
- what insulates the body
- what insulates the reindeer from cold temperatures
- what insulates each muscle cell
- what insulates nerve fibers
- what insulates electricity
- what insulates against cold
- what insulates and protects a neuron's axon
insonate
English
Verb
insonate (third-person singular simple present insonates, present participle insonating, simple past and past participle insonated)
- (transitive) To expose to, or treat with, ultrasound.
Synonyms
- insonicate
Related terms
- insonation
Anagrams
- Estonian, Etonians, Noetians, enations, nasonite
Latin
Verb
?nson?te
- second-person plural present active imperative of ?nson? "resound ye"
insonate From the web:
- what does insulated mean
- what does insonate
- disodium inosinate
- what is the meaning of insulated
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