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adhesion
[ ad-hee-zhuhn ]
noun
- the act or state of adhering; state of being adhered or united:
the adhesion of parts united by growth.
- steady or devoted attachment, support, etc.; adherence.
- assent; concurrence.
- Physics. the molecular force of attraction in the area of contact between unlike bodies that acts to hold them together. Compare cohesion ( def 2 ).
- Pathology.
- the abnormal union of adjacent tissues.
- the tissue involved.
- Botany. the union of normally separate parts.
- Railroads.
- the frictional resistance of rails to the tendency of driving wheels to slip.
adhesion
/ ədˈhiːʒən /
noun
- the quality or condition of sticking together or holding fast
- ability to make firm contact without skidding or slipping
- attachment or fidelity, as to a political party, cause, etc
- an attraction or repulsion between the molecules of unlike substances in contact: distinguished from cohesion
- pathol abnormal union of structures or parts
adhesion
/ ăd-hē′zhən /
- The force of attraction that causes two different substances to join. Adhesion causes water to spread out over glass.
- Compare cohesion
- A fibrous band of abnormal tissue that binds together tissues that are normally separate. Adhesions form during the healing of some wounds, usually as a result of inflammation.
Usage
Other Words From
- ad·hesion·al adjective
- nonad·hesion noun
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of adhesion1
Example Sentences
It said low adhesion would be an area of ongoing investigation.
He says: “You have a steel wheel on a steel rail and anything that causes low adhesion can be a big problem.”
The researchers' fruit fly model integrates the numerous signals that orchestrate cell movement, contraction, adhesion and proliferation.
The scientists also tested the effects of inhibiting contractility and cell adhesion and analysed the mechanical signature of embryonic cells with defective contractility.
Writing last month in the scientific journal National Science Review, the team details their breakthrough in adhesion by designing the shape-memory polymer material in the shape of hair-like fibrils.
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