释义 |
por·tal I. \ˈpōr]d.əl, ˈpȯr], ˈpōə], ˈpȯ(ə)], ]təl\ noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English, from Middle French, from Medieval Latin portale city gate, porch, from neuter of portalis of a gate, from Latin porta gate + -alis -al — more at ford 1. : door, gate, entrance; especially : a grand or imposing one 2. a. : the whole architectural composition surrounding and including the doorways and porches of a church < the church door … is set in a remarkable portal — M.C.A.Henniker > b. : a large roofed opening in a Spanish-American building : porch c. : the corner of a room separated by wainscoting to form a short passage to another room 3. a. : the space between the first two principal trusses at each end of a trussed bridge b. : any vertical space between two uprights included between two horizontals (as of floor and ceiling) which must be kept open for free communication in a building of skeleton construction c. : the entrance to a tunnel 4. : a communicating part or area of an organism: as a. : portal vein b. : the point at which something enters the body < portals of infection > c. : the connecting passage between foregut and midgut and midgut and hindgut in the vertebrate embryo II. adjective Etymology: New Latin porta + English -al 1. : of or relating to the transverse fissure on the underside of the liver where most of the vessels enter 2. : of, relating to, carried out by, or being any large vein that collects blood from one part of the body and distributes it in another part through a capillary network — see portal vein, renal portal vein |