different between moistness vs exudate
moistness
English
Etymology
From Middle English moistnes, moistnesse, equivalent to moist +? -ness.
Noun
moistness (countable and uncountable, plural moistnesses)
- The property of being moist.
- (obsolete) Moisture.
Translations
moistness From the web:
- what does moistness mean
- what does moistness
- what determines the moistness of a cookie
- moistness meaning
exudate
English
Etymology
exude +? -ate
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /??ksj?de?t/, /???zj?de?t/
Noun
exudate (plural exudates)
- A fluid that has exuded from somewhere; especially one that has exuded from a pore of an animal or plant.
- 1861 Stephen Jennings Goodfellow - Lectures on the Diseases of the Kidney, Generally Known as Brights Disease, and Dropsy
- The whitish lines of exudate seem at times to penetrate even between the straight tubes . . .
- 2005 Selma Tibi - The Medicinal Use of Opium in Ninth-century Baghdad
- When this is done, one should leave the poppy for some time, then return to it and gather any further exudate.
- 1861 Stephen Jennings Goodfellow - Lectures on the Diseases of the Kidney, Generally Known as Brights Disease, and Dropsy
Translations
Verb
exudate (third-person singular simple present exudates, present participle exudating, simple past and past participle exudated)
- (obsolete) To exude.
exudate From the web:
- what exudate means
- what's exudate medical
- what exudates contains pus
- what does exudate mean
- what is exudate and transudate
- what is exudate in a wound
- what causes exudate
- what is exudate on tonsils
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