释义 |
▪ I. † soˈlation1 Obs. rare. [a. OF. solacion, solation, or ad. L. type *sōlātio, f. sōlārī to console.] a. Rejoicing, joy. b. Consolation.
1483Caxton Gold. Leg. 436/3 In thys tyme of pasque our moder holy chyrche..maketh Solacyon for the resurrexyon of Jhesu cryste. a1500Chester Pl. (E.E.T.S.) i. 21 Now sithe I am thus..set in my solation, a biglie blisse here will I builde. 1757E. Griffith Lett. Henry & Frances (1767) II. 10 There are pleasures and solations indulged by Providence to every stage of life. ▪ II. solation2 Physical Chem.|sɒˈleɪʃən| [f. sol n.6 + -ation.] The change of a gel into a sol. So soˈlate v. intr., to undergo solation; trans., to convert into a sol.
1915[see gelation2]. 1926Jrnl. Morphol. & Physiol. XLI. 351 Locomotion in Amoeba is associated with gelation and solation. 1951New Biol. X. 16 The plasmagel must presumably contract at the hind end, as well as solating. 1958Jrnl. Cellular & Compar. Physiol. LII. 270 The plasmagel system of the intact Amoeba undergoes complete solation under suitably high pressure. 1977Jrnl. Cell Biol. LXXIV. 909/1 The gel solated slowly at room temperature after forming. Ibid. 921/1 Elevated KCl concentrations that solate the Dictyostelium gel. |