| 释义 | 
		an·ti·sep·tic I. \| ̷ ̷ ̷ ̷|septik, -ēk\ adjective Etymology: anti- (I) + Greek sēptikos putrefying — more at septic 1.   a.  : opposing sepsis, putrefaction, or decay : having the properties of an antiseptic : preventing or arresting the growth or action of microorganisms especially on or in living tissue — compare disinfectant  b.  : acting like an antiseptic : cleansing, purifying   < the antiseptic effect of sturdy criticism — New Republic >  also  : bracing   < smelling the crisp antiseptic air — Berton Roueché >  c.  : giving protection from what is contaminating   < new settlements a safe number of antiseptic miles from Johannesburg's whites — Time > 2.  : relating to or characterized by the use of antiseptics  < antiseptic treatment >  — compare aseptic 3.   a.  : free from living microorganisms : characterized by scrupulous cleanliness, sterilization, exclusion of bacteria : aseptic   < a technician in an antiseptic white jacket — Monsanto Magazine >  b.    (1)  : suggestive of a hospital or operating room (as in cleanliness or orderliness)    < abstract art's antiseptic charm — Lewis Mumford >    < the antiseptic world of interstellar mathematics — Time >   (2)  : excessively neat, well-ordered, or severe    < the room itself was bare, almost antiseptic — Nicholas Blake >   (3)  : lacking warmth or vitality    < a conception that was much too meek and antiseptic — Joseph Katz >   (4)  : dull, vapid, unimaginative    < main building of antiseptic institutional Georgian — Nathaniel Burt >  c.  : free or protected from what is contaminating   < lyrics that were antiseptic as Sunday school — Saturday Review >   < two romances of a lively but antiseptic nature — Wolcott Gibbs >  d.  : marked by objectivity or detachment; especially  : coldly impersonal   < gave the score an antiseptic reading — Horst Koegler > • an·ti·sep·ti·cal·ly \-tə̇k(ə)lē, -ēk-, -li\ adverb II. noun (-s)  : a substance that opposes sepsis, putrefaction, or decay : one that prevents or arrests the growth or action of microorganisms either by inhibiting their activity or by destroying them — used especially of agents applied to living tissue; compare disinfectant, germicide |