THIN vs CAPILLARY: NOUN
- N/A
- A minute, thin-walled vessel; particularly one of the smallest blood vessels connecting arteries and veins, but used also for the smallest lymphatic and biliary vessels.
- Any of the minute blood vessels connecting arterioles with venules
- A tube of small internal diameter; holds liquid by capillary action
- A narrow tube
- Any of the small blood vessels that connect arteries to veins
- One of the minute blood vessels that connect arterioles and venules. These blood vessels form an intricate network throughout the body for the interchange of various substances, such as oxygen and carbon dioxide, between blood and tissue cells.
- In botany, a fern: especially applied to such ferns as grow like tufts of hair on walls. Sir T. Browne. See I., 2.
- Pl. capillaries (-riz).
- A tube with a small bore. Specifically
- In anatomy: One of the minute blood-vessels which form a network between the terminations of the arteries and the beginnings of the veins.
- One of the minute lymphatic ducts.
- One of the intercellular passages in the liver which unite to form the bile-ducts.
- A tube or vessel, extremely fine or minute.
THIN vs CAPILLARY: ADJECTIVE
- Lacking spirit or sincere effort
- Of relatively small extent from one surface to the opposite or in cross section
- (of sound) lacking resonance or volume
- Not having enough photographic density or contrast to make satisfactory prints. Used of a negative.
- Lacking radiance or intensity.
- Lacking resonance or fullness; tinny.
- Lacking force or substance; flimsy.
- Having a low number of transactions.
- Relatively thin in consistency or low in density; not viscous
- Lacking excess flesh
- Not dense
- Having little substance or significance
- Sparsely supplied or provided; scanty.
- Watery.
- Flowing with relative ease; not viscous.
- More rarefied than normal.
- Not dense or concentrated; sparse.
- Having little bodily flesh or fat; lean or slender.
- Not great in diameter or cross section; fine.
- Relatively small in extent from one surface to the opposite, usually in the smallest solid dimension.
- Very narrow
- Not full or well grown; wanting in plumpness.
- Not close; not crowded; not filling the space; not having the individuals of which the thing is composed in a close or compact state; hence, not abundant
- Rare; not dense or thick; -- applied to fluids or soft mixtures.
- Having little thickness or extent from one surface to its opposite
- Pertaining to a narrow tube
- See the Note under Capillarity.
- Of or relating to hair
- Long and slender with a very small internal diameter
- Relating to or resembling a hair; fine and slender.
- Having a very small internal diameter.
- Of or relating to the capillaries.
- Of or relating to capillarity.
- Of or pertaining to hair
- The apparent attraction or repulsion between a solid and liquid caused by capillarity. See Capillarity, and Attraction.
- Pertaining to capillary tubes or vessels.
- Resembling a hair; fine; minute; very slender; having minute tubes or interspaces; having very small bore.
THIN vs CAPILLARY: VERB
- Take off weight
- Lessen the strength or flavor of a solution or mixture
- Lose thickness; become thin or thinner
- Make thin or thinner
- N/A
THIN vs CAPILLARY: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To make thin (in any of the senses of the adjective).
- N/A
THIN vs CAPILLARY: ADVERB
- In a thin manner.
- Not thickly or closely; in a seattered state.
- So as to be thin.
- Without viscosity
- N/A
THIN vs CAPILLARY: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Not viscous
- Become thin or thinner
- Lose thickness
- Lacking substance or significance
- A Middle English form of thine.
- To become thin.
- To make bare or empty.
- To reduce in numbers or frequency.
- To make lean or spare.
- To reduce in strength or richness: as, to thin the blood.
- To reduce in consistency or viscosity: said of liquids: as, to thin starch.
- To make less dense or compact; make sparse; specifically, to rarefy, as a gas.
- To make thin.
- A fragile claim to fame"
- Having no depth: said of a school of fish.
- Scantily occupied or furnished; bare; empty: used absolutely or with of.
- Limited in quantity or number; small or infrequent; scanty.
- Meager; lean; spare; not plump or fat.
- Limited in power or capacity; feeble; weak.
- Of sound, lacking in fullness; faint, and often somewhat shrill or metallic in tone.
- Deficient in some characteristic or important ingredient; lacking strength or richness; specifically, of liquors, small: opposed to strong.
- Having slight consistency or viscosity: said of liquids: as, thin syrup; thin gruel.
- Hence, easily seen through; transparent, literally or figuratively; shallow; flimsy; slight: as, a thin disguise.
- Having the constituent parts loose or sparse in arrangement; lacking density, compactness, or luxuriance; rare; specifically, of the air and other gases, rarefied.
- Very narrow in one diameter; having the opposite surfaces very near together; having little thickness or depth; not thick; not heavy: as, thin paper; thin boards: opposed to thick.
- Very narrow in all diameters; slender; slim; long and fine: as, a thin wire; a thin string.
- Thinly.
- 14. In art, characterized, in composition, by few and widely separated elements, by absence of serious interest, or by lack of body and force in technique.
- Having insufficient density or contrast to give a good photographic print or a satisfactory image on the screen; weak: said of a negative or a lantern-slide.
- (transitive; intransitive verb) To make or become thin or thinner.
- Holds liquid by capillary action
- A tube of small internal diameter
- In surgery, linear: descriptive of a fracture of the skull without separation of the parts of the injured bones.
- Pertaining to the phenomena of the rise of fluids in tubes and chinks, and, more generally, to the collecting of liquids in drops, their spreading over surfaces (as oil on water), and various other phenomena explicable proximately by surface-tension and ultimately by cohesion and adhesion, considered as forces acting at finite but insensible distances.
- Pertaining to a capillary or to capillaries: as, capillary circulation.
- Resembling a single hair; specifically, in anatomy, having (as a tube) so small a bore that water cannot be poured into it, and will not run through it.
- Specifically, in botany, resembling hair in the manner of growth: applied in this sense by Ray, Boerhaave, and other early botanists to ferns.
- Pertaining to or resembling hair: as, a capillary lotion; capillary fibers or threads.
THIN vs CAPILLARY: RELATED WORDS
- Pale, Anorexic, Spindly, Stringy, Lean, Wispy, Ribbonlike, Narrow, Sparse, Flat, Flimsy, Weak, Slender, Skinny, Slim
- Granulation tissue, Fibrin, Microchannel, Bilayer, Anionic, Adsorption, Lamella, Membrane, Electrochromatography, Hair, Tubule, Thin, Capillary tubing, Hairlike, Capillary tube
THIN vs CAPILLARY: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Pale, Anorexic, Spindly, Stringy, Lean, Wispy, Ribbonlike, Narrow, Sparse, Flat, Flimsy, Weak, Slender, Skinny, Slim
- Interfacial, Granulation tissue, Fibrin, Microchannel, Bilayer, Anionic, Adsorption, Lamella, Membrane, Hair, Tubule, Thin, Capillary tubing, Hairlike, Capillary tube
THIN vs CAPILLARY: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Do you have a thin kerf rip blade?
- Examples include chap, ship, thin, whiz, and photo.
- Europa has a thin atmosphere rich with oxygen.
- Patient skin is velvety thin, loose, and stretchable.
- US, or thin clothes when it is snowing.
- It adds a thin coating of silicone over your case and then caps it with a thin aluminum shell with a matte finish.
- The tart looks amazing, thin on crust meaning thin on calories!
- They may become abnormally thin, or thin for their body, and still talk about feeling fat.
- Bandgap engineering of titanium based oxynitride thin films and molybdenum disulfide thin fi.
- Shannon Thin Elk, Julie Thin Elk and Carrie Thin Elk.
- The capillary fringe above the water table is a familiar consequence of capillary pressure.
- Despite bubble cap smallest for pm capillary, bubble growth times increased increasing capillary size.
- Note that this capillary is referred to as sheath capillary in this protocol.
- Capillary occlusion leads to the formation of dilated capillary collaterals which may remain serviceable and competent for years.
- In capillary sequencing machines, DNAfragments are separated by size through a long, thin, acrylicfibre capillary.
- In many terminal villus sinusoidal transformation of capillary tubes and formation capillary membranes was marked.
- A common apparatus used to demonstrate capillary action is the capillary tube.
- Capillary action is also known as capillarity, capillary motion, or wicking.
- Capillary action is sometimes called capillary motion, capillarity, or wicking.
- Bulbs, prepare capillary collection device by firmly inserting the capillary tube into the capillary bulb.
THIN vs CAPILLARY: QUESTIONS
- Is foreign debt included in thin capitalization rule?
- What are the disadvantages of thin client computing?
- Can You thin Bullseye Shellac with denatured alcohol?
- What is high-performance thin layer chromatography?
- Do thin capitalization rules affect leverage ratios?
- What is thin stillage fractionation using ultrafiltration?
- How long did Thin Lizzy's'Thin Lizzy'stay on the charts?
- Do thin films with crystalline absorber thin films produce better cell structures?
- Are ultra thin socks thin enough to go barefoot in shoes?
- Why do most Africans have thin noses and thin lips?
- Do hummingbirds drink nectar through capillary action?
- What is capillary concrete's performance guarantee?
- What is a PCR-Capillary electrophoresis microdevice?
- How does aerobic exercise increase capillary density?
- Why does norepinephrine increase capillary contractility?
- What is microfluidics capillary electrophoresis (MCE)?
- Bagaimana cara mengganti pengkajian capillary refill?
- What is the effect of binder concentration on visco-capillary and elasto capillary solutions?
- What is capillary rise and capillary depression in hydrophobic materials?
- Does capillary size increase as the capillary number increases?