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「GRACILE」を含む例文一覧
該当件数 : 6件
To provide a production method of Lophatherum gracile leaf sliced pieces, and to provide applications to tobacco products.例文帳に追加
淡竹葉製スライス片製造方法およびタバコ製品中への応用に関する。 - 特許庁
PRODUCTION METHOD OF LOPHATHERUM GRACILE LEAF REGENERATED SLICED PIECE AND APPLICATION TO TOBACCO PRODUCT例文帳に追加
淡竹葉再生スライス片の製造方法およびタバコ製品中への応用 - 特許庁
The stress preventive agent including the essence of Lophatherum gracile in the grass family is incorporated into a cosmetic for external use for skin.例文帳に追加
イネ科コササクサのエッセンスからなる、ストレス予防剤を化粧料などの皮膚外用剤に含有させる。 - 特許庁
This protein is derived from a fungus such as Chaetomium gracile, has an acetylcholine esterase activity, and has the N-terminal amino acid sequence Ala-Thr-Leu-Thr-Gln-Val-Thr-Asn-Phe.例文帳に追加
アセチルキシランエステラーゼ活性を有するタンパク質が、ケトミウム・グラシレの如きケトミウム属の真菌を用いて生産される。 - 特許庁
The antiviral agent comprises as an effective ingredient an extract of a crude drug containing Forsythia suspensa, Lonicera japonica, Platycodon grandiflorus, Mentha arvensis, Lophatherum gracile, Glycyrrhiza uralensis, Schizonepeta tenuifolia, a dried fermented product of Glycine max and Arctium lappa, and a horn of antelope or Phragmites communis.例文帳に追加
レンギョウ、キンギンカ、キキョウ、ハッカ、タンチクヨウ、カンゾウ、ケイガイ、タンズシ及びゴボウシと、レイヨウカク又はロコンとを含む生薬の抽出物を有効成分として含有する抗ウイルス剤。 - 特許庁
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遺伝子名称シソーラスでの「GRACILE」の意味 |
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gracile
fly | 遺伝子名 | gracile |
同義語(エイリアス) | ||
SWISS-PROTのID | --- | |
EntrezGeneのID | EntrezGene:251210 | |
その他のDBのID | FlyBase:FBgn0001131 |
human | 遺伝子名 | GRACILE |
同義語(エイリアス) | BCS1L; BCS1-like (yeast); FLNMS; BCS; H-BCS1; Mitochondrial chaperone BCS1; h-BCS; BCS1 (yeast homolog)-like; Hs.6719; BCS1-like protein; BCS1 | |
SWISS-PROTのID | SWISS-PROT:Q9Y276 | |
EntrezGeneのID | EntrezGene:617 | |
その他のDBのID | HGNC:1020 |
本文中に表示されているデータベースの説明
Wiktionary英語版での「GRACILE」の意味 |
gracile
語源
Borrowed from Middle French gracil, gracile (“slender, thin”) (modern French gracile (“gracile”)), or directly from its etymon Latin gracilis (“slender, slim, thin; lean, meagre, scanty; simple, unadorned”), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *kerḱ- (“to become thin; to wane”). The sense “graceful or gracefully slender” was apparently influenced by the non-cognate word grace. The English word is cognate with Italian gracile (“delicate, frail; slender, thin”), Portuguese grácil, Spanish grácil (“graceful; delicate; slender”).[1]
発音
形容詞
gracile (comparative more gracile, superlative most gracile)
- (also figurative) Lean, slender, thin.
- 1701 November 30, Abraham de la Pryme, “III. Part of a Letter from the Reverend Mr Abraham de la Pryme to the Publisher, Concerning Trees Found under Ground in Hatfield Chace. Thorn, Nov. 19, 1701 [Julian calendar].”, in Philosophical Transactions. Giving Some Account of the Present Undertakings, Studies and Labours of the Ingenious, in Many Considerable Parts of the World, volume XXII, London: Printed for S[amuel] Smith and B[enjamin] Walford, printers to the Royal Society, […], published 1702 (October 1701 issue), →OCLC, page 986:
- [T]hoſe Trees that are called Firs by the Vulgar (from their near conformity かつ likeneſs to that Tree) are well known by all Learned Men (by the Redneſs, the Roſinous Nature of the Wood, the Gracil Cones hanging downwards, &c.) to be the true Pitch-Tree, of which there are ſuch great plenty in Norway, Sweden, and other Countries of the North, [...]
- 1835 July 24, Tho[ma]s Frognall Dibdin, quoting I[saac] D’Israeli, “Kensingtoniana”, in Reminiscences of a Literary Life; with Anecdotes of Books, and of Book Collectors, 2nd part, London: John Major, […], published 1836, →OCLC, footnote, page 788:
- The finish, the extreme delicacy of his [William Blake's] pencil, in his light gracile forms, marvellouslfy contrast with the ideal figures of his mystic allegories; sometimes playful, as the loveliness of the arabesques of Raffaelle.
- 1902, D[aniel] J[ohn] Cunningham, “The Nervous System. The Brain and Spinal Cord, with their Meninges.”, in D. J. Cunningham, editor, Text-book of Anatomy, Edinburgh, London: Young J. Pentland, →OCLC, page 456:
- The gracile and cuneate nuclei [of the brainstem] take shape before the decussation of the pyramids is fully completed [...]. The gracile nucleus appears in the form of a small irregular mass of gray matter in the interior of the funiculus gracilis. [...] It [the cuneate nucleus] presents a very different appearance from the gracile nucleus, because throughout its whole length the gray nucleus and the fibres of the strand are separated from each other by a sharp line of demarcation.
- 2000, T. H. Watkins, “Introduction: Home of My Heart”, in The Redrock Chronicles: Saving Wild Utah, Baltimore, Md.: Johns Hopkins University Press, →ISBN, page 3:
- I am helplessly addicted to this place, this wondrous geographic puzzle of canyons turning in on themselves, [...] of horizon-wide sweeps of sunlit emptiness and gracile unknown places where darkness hides and will not tell its name.
- 2006, Bradley J. Adams, “Biological Profile: Race/Ancestry, Sex, and Stature”, in Lawrence Kobilinsky, editor, Forensic Anthropology (Inside Forensic Science), New York, N.Y.: Chelsea House, Infobase Publishing, →ISBN, page 47:
- While the pelvis is the best area to determine an individual's sex, the skull may also be used. [...] For example, males usually have very prominent (または robust) mastoid processes, projections that serve as muscle attachment sites behind the ears, while females have much smaller (または gracile) mastoid processes. Due to human variation, it is possible for a man to have very gracile features or a female to have very robust features.
- 2015, Sankar Chatterjee, “The Origin of Birds”, in The Rise of Birds: 225 Million Years of Evolution, 2nd edition, Baltimore, Md.: Johns Hopkins University Press, →ISBN, page 47, column 2:
- The deinonychosaurs have gracile skulls, a carnivorous diet, and asymmetric flight feathers; all these features possibly evolved secondarily in deinonychosaurs.
- (chiefly zoology, anthropology, paleontology) Of an animal or skeletal element: having a slender frame.
- 1945, J. Lawrence Angel, “Neolithic Ancestors of the Greeks”, in American Journal of Archaeology, volume 49, number 3, , page 256:
- This tentative comparison, plus consideration of individual skulls, shows the Neolithic pre-Greeks more Mediterranean than the Greeks, with emphasis on intermediate or gracile Mediterranean rather more than on the rugged Basic White trend, [...]
- 1981, Nancy Makepeace Turner, “Early Hominid Lifeways: The Critical Role of an Interpretive Framework”, in On Becoming Human, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire: Cambridge University Press, →ISBN, page 254:
- Where stratified fossil sequences are known, "gracile" fossils precede robust ones. The extremely robust hominids do not appear on the scene until about 2 million years ago, followed shortly thereafter by an "advanced" gracile. Both the advanced gracile and robust forms probably evolved from earlier gracile australopithecines.
- 2004, Richard Dawkins, “Ape-men”, in The Ancestor’s Tale: The Dawn of Life, New York, N.Y.: Houghton Mifflin Company, →ISBN, pages 86–87:
- At various times since Homo first appeared in Africa, it shared the continent with more robust hominids, perhaps several different species of them. [...] They seem to have evolved from more ‘gracile’ apes (gracile being the opposite of robust). The gracile apes are also placed in the genus Australopithecus, and we too almost certainly emerged from among gracile australopithecine ranks.
- 2004, Clive Finlayson, “Comparative Behaviour and Ecology of Neanderthals and Modern Humans”, in Neanderthals and Modern Humans: An Ecological and Evolutionary Perspective, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire: Cambridge University Press, →ISBN, page 117:
- We would also expect increasing home-range size in Neanderthals in 'edge' regions (bordering the MLB かつ the plains), such as south-west France, in response to habitat fragmentation during periods of expansion of open vegetation. A more gracile morphology would have been far more efficient over larger areas.
- Graceful or gracefully slender.
- 1923 January, Thomas Mann, “Tristan”, in The Dial, volume LXXIV, New York, N.Y.: The Dial Publishing Company, →OCLC, chapter XII, page 76:
- Then Herr Spinnell turned his back and got away from there. Followed by the jubliations of the little Klŏterjahn, holding his arm in a certain cautious and stiffly gracile manner, he walked over the gravel with the vehement, yet hesitating steps of one who seeks to hide the fact that he is—inwardly—on the run.
- 2004, James Simpson, “The Elegiac”, in Reform and Cultural Revolution (The Oxford English Literary History; 2 (1350–1547)), Oxford, Oxfordshire, New York, N.Y.: Oxford University Press, →ISBN, page 121:
派生語
- gracile australopithecine
- gracility
- gracilize
関連する語
- gracilent
- gracilis
参照
- ^ “gracile, adj.”, in OED Online , Oxford, Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, December 2013; “gracile, adj.”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–2022.
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