different between protect vs otoprotective
protect
English
Etymology
Attested in English since 1530, from Latin pr?t?ctus (“covered, protected”), past participle of pr?tegere (“to cover the front, protect”) from pr?, pr?- (“before, in front of”) +? tegere (“to cover”), see tegument. Displaced native Middle English shelden, from Old English s?ildan (”to protect,” literally ”to shield”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /p???t?kt/
- Rhymes: -?kt
Verb
protect (third-person singular simple present protects, present participle protecting, simple past and past participle protected)
- (transitive, intransitive) To keep safe; to defend; to guard; to prevent harm coming to.
- (travel, aviation) To book a passenger on a later flight if there is a chance they will not be able to board their earlier reserved flight.
Synonyms
- beshield
- See also Thesaurus:defend
Derived terms
- protection
Translations
protect From the web:
- what protects the spinal cord
- what protects the brain
- what protects the cell
- what protects earth from solar winds
- what protects dna
- what protects the nucleus
- what protects the heart
- what protects us from the sun
otoprotective
English
Etymology
oto- +? protective
Adjective
otoprotective (comparative more otoprotective, superlative most otoprotective)
- That protects against ototoxicity or other damage to the ear
Related terms
- otoprotectant
- otoprotection
otoprotective From the web:
- cytoprotective agent
- cytoprotective agents examples
- cytoprotective agents for ulcer
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