Tryphena and tryphosa
two female Christians, active workers, whom Paul salutes in his epistle to the Romans (16:12).
Read Also:
- Try-pot
noun 1. See under tryworks. plural noun 1. (in whaling) a furnace in which a kettle (try-pot) is placed for rendering blubber.
- Trypsin
noun, Biochemistry. 1. a proteolytic enzyme of the pancreatic juice, capable of converting proteins into peptone. noun 1. an enzyme occurring in pancreatic juice: it catalyses the hydrolysis of proteins to peptides and is secreted from the pancreas in the form of trypsinogen See also chymotrypsin trypsin tryp·sin (trĭp’sĭn) n. An enzyme of pancreatic juice […]
- Trypsinogen
noun, Biochemistry. 1. a precursor of trypsin that is secreted by the pancreas and is activated to trypsin in the small intestine. noun 1. the inactive precursor of trypsin that is converted to trypsin by the enzyme enterokinase trypsinogen tryp·sin·o·gen (trĭp-sĭn’ə-jən) or tryp·so·gen (trĭp’sə-jən) n. The inactive precursor of trypsin, produced by the pancreas and […]
- Tryptamine
tryptamine tryp·ta·mine (trĭp’tə-mēn’) n. A crystalline substance that is formed in plant and animal tissues from tryptophan and is an intermediate in various metabolic processes.
- Tryptic
noun, Biochemistry. 1. a proteolytic enzyme of the pancreatic juice, capable of converting proteins into peptone. noun 1. an enzyme occurring in pancreatic juice: it catalyses the hydrolysis of proteins to peptides and is secreted from the pancreas in the form of trypsinogen See also chymotrypsin tryptic tryp·tic (trĭp’tĭk) adj. Relating to or resulting from […]