释义 |
nucleated, a.|ˈnjuːklɪeɪtɪd| [f. nucleate v.] 1. Having a nucleus. (Chiefly Biol.; common from 1845, esp. in nucleated cell.)
1845Zoologist III. 955 The nucleated vesicle, the fundamental form of all organization. 1855Owen Skel. & Teeth 6 The appearance in it of numerous minute nucleated cells. 1880Bastian Brain 40 The cell in this case is only a nucleated expansion of the fibre. 2. Clustered together, esp. of buildings in villages.
1897Eng. Hist. Rev. Apr. 314 The Germanic nucleated village is distinguished from the isolated homestead. Ibid. Oct. 769 He draws a sharp distinction between the ‘nucleated’ villages of eastern and central England, and the ‘hamletted’ villages of the south-west. 1942Rep. Comm. Land Utilisation in Rural Areas 11 in Parl. Papers 1941–2 (Cmd. 6378) IV. 421 In other parts, especially where the community was organised under the feudal or manorial systems, nucleated settlements or villages are the rule. 1954M. Beresford Lost Villages vii. 233 One such district is the plain of Lancashire. Here, at first blush, we might seem to have nothing but a countryside of compact, nucleated villages. 1970N. Chadwick Celts v. 125 Houses..were grouped together in small nucleated settlements. Ibid., Most settlement sites, whether nucleated or individual, were enclosed. |