s とも書く
| fly | 遺伝子名 | s |
| 同義語(エイリアス) | eb; ebonized; ebonised; sable | |
| SWISS-PROTのID | --- | |
| EntrezGeneのID | EntrezGene:44857 | |
| その他のDBのID | FlyBase:FBgn0003309 |
| human | 遺伝子名 | S |
| 同義語(エイリアス) | HTSS; D6S586E; corneodesmosin; CDSN; S protein; Corneodesmosin precursor | |
| SWISS-PROTのID | SWISS-PROT:Q15517 | |
| EntrezGeneのID | EntrezGene:1041 | |
| その他のDBのID | HGNC:1802 |
| mouse | 遺伝子名 | s |
| 同義語(エイリアス) | ETb; endothelin receptor type B; Endothelin B receptor precursor; ET-B; Sox10m1; ET>B<; AU022549; Ednrb; Endothelin receptor Non-selective type | |
| SWISS-PROTのID | SWISS-PROT:P48302 | |
| EntrezGeneのID | EntrezGene:13618 | |
| その他のDBのID | MGI:102720 |
| rat | 遺伝子名 | S |
| 同義語(エイリアス) | silver (mapped); S_mapped; Silver | |
| SWISS-PROTのID | --- | |
| EntrezGeneのID | EntrezGene:24762 | |
| その他のDBのID | RGD:3613 |
本文中に表示されているデータベースの説明
出典:Wiktionary
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2025/03/19 03:08 UTC 版)
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2026/03/30 22:47 UTC 版)
’s (clitic)
’s (clitic)
’s
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2026/05/05 22:47 UTC 版)
From 中期英語 -s, -es, from 古期英語 -es (“-'s”, masculine and neuter genitive singular ending), from Proto-Germanic *-as, *-is (masculine and neuter genitive singular ending). The apostrophe was added under the false belief that it was a contraction of English his, and retained to distinguish it from the plural. Cognate with Dutch -s, -es (“-'s”), German -s, -es (“-'s”), Danish -s, -es (“-'s”), Swedish -s (“-'s”), Norwegian -s (“-'s”), Icelandic -s (“-'s”).
-'s (enclitic)
Equivalent to -s, with addition of apostrophe.
-'s
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2025/12/21 20:37 UTC 版)
From -s (suffix forming regular plurals of nouns) and ( ) (encloses optional variants or variant elements).
-(s)
From -s (suffix forming the third-person singular indicative present tense of verbs) and ( ) (encloses optional variants or variant elements).
-(s)
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2026/05/07 14:11 UTC 版)
Inherited from 中期英語 -s, -es, from 古期英語 -as, nominative-accusative plural ending of masculine a-stem (i.e. strong) declension nouns, from Proto-West Germanic *-ōs, from Proto-Germanic *-ōs, *‑ōz, from Proto-Indo-European *-es, *-oes (plural endings). The spread of this ending in later 中期英語 was once argued to have been the result of Anglo-Norman influence; however, -as was already the most common 古期英語 plural marker (used in approximately 40% of 古期英語 nouns), and was initially more common in the North of England where French influence was weakest, only later gradually spreading south, replacing the usual southern plural ending -en. Cognate with Scots -s (plural ending), Saterland Frisian -s (plural ending), West Frisian -s (plural ending), Dutch -s (plural ending), Low German -s (plural ending), Danish -er (plural ending), Swedish -r, -ar, -or (plural ending), Icelandic -ar (plural ending), Gothic -𐍉𐍃 (-ōs, nominative plural ending of a-stem masculine nouns). Not directly related to German -er (plural ending) which has a different origin.
-s
From 中期英語 -(e)s (third-person singular ending), from Northumbrian 古期英語 -es, -as (third-person singular endings). Gradually replaced the older -eth, from 古期英語 -(e)þ, -aþ, during the 中期英語 and Early Modern English periods.
It is predominantly believed that -(e)s is identical to the 古期英語 second-person singular ending -es, -est (cf. archaic Modern English -est, as in thou singest). The use for the third-person singular would have been caused by speakers of Old Norse who switched to speaking English and confounded the endings due to analogy with their native tongue. In Old Norse, the second and third person singular indicative forms were identical (e.g. þú masar, hann masar; þú þekkir, hann þekkir; etc.).
An alternative theory sees the shift from /θ/ in -eth to /s/ (later /z/) in -(e)s as a mere phonetic simplification due to the frequency of the ending, but the objection to this is that no such development can be observed anywhere else in English. Nevertheless the relative similarity in sound between both forms may have facilitated the spread of -es.
-s
From 中期英語 -es, from 古期英語 -es, the masculine and neuter genitive singular ending of strong nouns. More at -'s.
-s
-s
Modern sense in slang [circa 1936]. According to OED, a colloquial clipping of the hypocoristic diminutive suffix -sy. As AHD writes, -sy itself usually being informal, ironic and/or jocular, and possibly a combination of -s (“plural marker”) and conflation of -y as adjectival with its sense as a diminutive suffix (e.g., puppy, kitty), the latter notion probably from Scots.
-s
Derived from 's.
From Proto-West Germanic *-issju, *-ussju, from Proto-Germanic *-isjō, *-usjō.
-s
-s
The suffix appears most obviously in the third declension, as in urbs. Stem-final consonants are often modified or deleted before the suffix: for example, lēg- (“law”) + -s → lēx (“law”, nominative singular) and dent- (“tooth”) + -s → dēns (“tooth”, nominative singular). Etymologically, the Latin third declension includes both original consonant-stem nouns and i-stem nouns, but these two classes are not consistently distinguished in the nominative singular. Many nominative forms that originally ended in *-is were shortened by syncope or analogy (e.g. *ǵénh₁tis > gēns), while some nominative forms of original consonant-stem nouns had -is added by analogy (e.g. *ḱwṓ and *h₂yéwHō were replaced in Latin with canis and iuvenis, respectively). The ending -s usually does not appear in the nominative singular of n-stem, r-stem, or l-stem nouns. Most non-neuter n-stems instead drop the -n- and take the ending -ō̆ in the nominative singular (such as homō̆, hominis or carō̆, carnis); a smaller set end in -n in the nominative singular (as in tībīcen, tībīcinis); -s appears only in a handful of exceptional nouns such as canis, iuvenis, sanguī̆s. R-stem and l-stem nouns (such as āctor, cōnsul) normally have nominative singular forms ending in -r or -l respectively. Latin nominative singular forms that end in -ns, -rs or -ls are derived by consonant cluster simplification from stems ending in -t(i)- or -d(i)- (e.g. mōns, montis; pars, partis; puls, pultis).
Second declension non-neuter nominative singular forms originally ended in the suffix -s preceded by the Indo-European thematic vowel *-o-. Because of vowel reduction, Proto-Italic *-os developed regularly to Classical Latin -us, which is often interpreted as a nominative suffix of its own (an example of rebracketing) rather than a sequence of stem-final vowel + -s. Likewise, in the fourth declension and fifth declension, -s is always preceded by the characteristic vowels of these declensions (-u- and -ē- respectively), with the result that -us and -ēs are frequently regarded as nominative singular suffixes for these declensions.
The suffix -s generally appears only on non-neuter nominative/vocative forms, but it is found in the neuter nominative/vocative/accusative singular of third declension adjectives "of one termination". From an etymological perspective, third-declension neuter nouns such as genus, generis that end in -s in the nominative singular alternating with -r- in oblique forms do not end in this suffix: rather, they are derived from stems that originally ended in the consonant *s (which was changed to -r- by rhotacism when followed by a suffix starting with a vowel).
-s’
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2026/03/30 16:50 UTC 版)
From 中期英語 -s, -es, from 古期英語 -es (“-'s”, masculine and neuter genitive singular ending), which survives in many old compounds. In more recent coinage, from contraction of the derived clitic -'s in compounds. For more, see -'s.
-s-
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2026/05/11 15:29 UTC 版)
Based on pseudo–HTML code, in which a slash indicates the end of an element (for example, marks the end of bold formatting). Originally written as (to mark the end of a sarcastic message) with the block of text enclosed (see < > ), this was later simplified to /sarcasm and eventually just /s.
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2026/03/22 21:44 UTC 版)
S (upper case, lower case s, plural Ss or S's)
S (upper case, lower case s, plural Ss or S's)
Abbreviation.
S (countable and uncountable, plural Ss)
S (not comparable)
From the first letter of set and of stage, two fundamental concepts of the theory.
S
S (upper case, lower case s)
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2026/01/05 13:12 UTC 版)
s'
s'
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2025/10/17 01:57 UTC 版)
s*** (third-person singular simple present s***s, present participle s***ting or s****ing, simple past and past participle s*** or s***ted or s****ed)
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2026/04/29 21:39 UTC 版)
Abbreviation of scalar (“particle with spin 0”).
s-
Abbreviation of sec- (“secondary”).
s-
s-
This comes from the command s (substitute), originally in ed and also found in Perl, to replace one string with another. Although the command does not require slashes (other punctuation can be used as delimiters) in this informal use (i.e., outside of scripting) slashes are virtually universally used.
In the original command, a trailing g means that the change in strings should be effected every time the first string appears (not just the first time it appears); this g is often used in this informal verb also, as described in the usage note below.
s/ (imperative only)
出典:Wikipedia
出典:『Wikipedia』 (2009/02/20 00:42 UTC 版)
S* (pronounced "S Star") is a collaboration between seven universities and the Karolinska Institutet of Sweden. The goal is to provide course material for training in bioinformatics, genomics and medical informatics.
![]()