Idiolysin


idiolysin id·i·ol·y·sin (ĭd’ē-ŏl’ĭ-sĭn, ĭd’ē-ə-lī’sĭn)
n.
A lysin that occurs in the blood of a person or an animal without the injection of a stimulating antigen or the passive transfer of antibodies.

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    [id-ee-uh m] /ˈɪd i əm/ noun 1. an expression whose meaning is not predictable from the usual meanings of its constituent elements, as kick the bucket or hang one’s head, or from the general grammatical rules of a language, as the table round for the round table, and that is not a constituent of a […]

  • Idiomatic

    [id-ee-uh-mat-ik] /ˌɪd i əˈmæt ɪk/ adjective 1. peculiar to or characteristic of a particular language or dialect: idiomatic French. 2. containing or using many . 3. having a distinct style or character, especially in the arts: idiomatic writing; an idiomatic composer. adj. 1712, from Latin idiomaticus, from Greek idiomatikos; from idios “one’s own” (see idiom) […]

  • Idiomatically

    [id-ee-uh-mat-ik] /ˌɪd i əˈmæt ɪk/ adjective 1. peculiar to or characteristic of a particular language or dialect: idiomatic French. 2. containing or using many . 3. having a distinct style or character, especially in the arts: idiomatic writing; an idiomatic composer. adj. 1712, from Latin idiomaticus, from Greek idiomatikos; from idios “one’s own” (see idiom) […]

  • Idiomorphic

    [id-ee-uh-mawr-fik] /ˌɪd i əˈmɔr fɪk/ adjective 1. Also, euhedral. (in a rock) noting or pertaining to a mineral constituent having its own characteristic outward crystalline form unaltered by the other constituents of the rock; automorphic. 2. having its own characteristic form. /ˌɪdɪəʊˈmɔːfɪk/ adjective 1. (of minerals) occurring naturally in the form of well-developed crystals

  • Idiomaticity

    [id-ee-uh-mat-ik] /ˌɪd i əˈmæt ɪk/ adjective 1. peculiar to or characteristic of a particular language or dialect: idiomatic French. 2. containing or using many . 3. having a distinct style or character, especially in the arts: idiomatic writing; an idiomatic composer. adj. 1712, from Latin idiomaticus, from Greek idiomatikos; from idios “one’s own” (see idiom) […]


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