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hydrostat
[ hahy-druh-stat ]
noun
- an electrical device for detecting the presence of water, as from overflow or leakage.
- any of various devices for preventing injury to a steam boiler when its water sinks below a certain level.
hydrostat
/ ˈhaɪdrəʊˌstæt /
noun
- a device that detects the presence of water as a prevention against drying out, overflow, etc, esp one used as a warning in a steam boiler
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Word History and Origins
Origin of hydrostat1
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Example Sentences
The human tongue is a muscular hydrostat, which, like a water balloon, must maintain the same overall volume when its shape changes.
From Science Magazine
An elephant’s proboscis, like a human tongue, is a type of muscular hydrostat: it has no bones, so it can move in myriad ways.
From Scientific American
Rather, they intertwine to create a flexible matrix, forming what is called a muscular hydrostat; this structure is similar to an octopus’s tentacles or an elephant’s trunk.
From Scientific American
The researchers will also include in the study another invertebrate, whose body is a muscular hydrostat–the famous C. elegans roundworm.
From Scientific American
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