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单词 strain
释义

strain

1
[ streyn ]
/ streɪn /
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verb (used with object)

verb (used without object)

noun

Origin of strain

1
First recorded in1250–1300; Middle English streinen (verb), from Old French estrein-, stem of estreindre “to press tightly, grip,” from Latin stringere “to bind, tie, draw tight.” See stringent

SYNONYMS FOR strain

1 tighten.
7 filter, sieve.
10 hug, embrace, press.
17 seep.
20 exertion.
22 wrench.
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synonym study for strain

3. Strain, sprain imply a wrenching, twisting, and stretching of muscles and tendons. To strain is to stretch tightly, make taut, wrench, tear, cause injury to, by long-continued or sudden and too violent effort or movement: to strain one's heart by overexertion, one's eyes by reading small print. To sprain is to strain excessively (but without dislocation) by a sudden twist or wrench, the tendons and muscles connected with a joint, especially those of the ankle or wrist: to sprain an ankle.

OTHER WORDS FROM strain

strain·ing·ly, adverbstrainless, adjectivestrain·less·ly, adverb

Words nearby strain

straight ticket, straight time, straight up, straightway, straight whiskey, strain, strained, strainer, strain fracture, strain gauge, strain hardening

Definition for strain (2 of 2)

strain2
[ streyn ]
/ streɪn /

noun

Origin of strain

2
before 950; Middle English strene,Old English strēon lineage, stock, tribe; akin to strīenan to beget

SYNONYMS FOR strain

7 streak, vein, predisposition.
SEE SYNONYMS FOR strain ON THESAURUS.COM
Dictionary.com UnabridgedBased on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2020

Example sentences from the Web for strain

British Dictionary definitions for strain (1 of 2)

strain1
/ (streɪn) /

verb

noun

Word Origin for strain

C13: from Old French estreindre to press together, from Latin stringere to bind tightly

British Dictionary definitions for strain (2 of 2)

strain2
/ (streɪn) /

noun

the main body of descendants from one ancestor
a group of organisms within a species or variety, distinguished by one or more minor characteristics
a variety of bacterium or fungus, esp one used for a culture
a streak; trace
archaic a kind, type, or sort

Word Origin for strain

Old English strēon; related to Old High German gistriuni gain, Latin struere to construct
Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

Medical definitions for strain (1 of 2)

strain 11
[ strān ]

v.

n.

Medical definitions for strain (2 of 2)

strain 22
[ strān ]

n.

The collective descendants of a common ancestor; a race, stock, line, or breed.
Any of the various lines of ancestry united in an individual or a family; ancestry or lineage.
A group of organisms of the same species, having distinctive characteristics but not usually considered a separate breed or variety.
An artificial variety of a domestic animal or cultivated plant.
The American Heritage® Stedman's Medical Dictionary Copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company.

Scientific definitions for strain

strain
[ strān ]

A group of organisms of the same species, sharing certain hereditary characteristics not typical of the entire species but minor enough not to warrant classification as a separate breed or variety. Resistance to specific antibiotics is a feature of certain strains of bacteria.
The extent to which a body is distorted when it is subjected to a deforming force, as when under stress. The distortion can involve a change both in shape and in size. All measures of strain are dimensionless (they have no unit of measure).Axial strain is equal to the ratio between the change in length of an object and its original length.Volume strain is equal to the ratio between the change in volume of an object and its original volume. It is also called bulk strain.Shear strain is equal to the ratio between the amount by which an object is skewed and its length. Compare stress. See more at Hooke's law.
The American Heritage® Science Dictionary Copyright © 2011. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.
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