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metaplasm
[ met-uh-plaz-uhm ]
noun
- Cell Biology. the nonliving matter or inclusions, as starch or pigments, within a cell.
- Grammar.
- a change in the structure of a word or sentence made by adding, removing, or transposing the sounds or words of which it is composed or the letters that represent them.
- the formation of oblique cases from a stem other than that of the nominative.
metaplasm
/ ˈmɛtəˌplæzəm /
noun
- the nonliving constituents, such as starch and pigment granules, of the cytoplasm of a cell
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Derived Forms
- ˌmetaˈplasmic, adjective
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Other Words From
- meta·plasmic adjective
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Word History and Origins
Origin of metaplasm1
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Example Sentences
The pupil went through all the routine of metaplasm, schematism, and figures of speech; but this was only the groundwork.
From Project Gutenberg
We find in it the datives ἀγώνοις, ἐντυγχανόντοις, and therefore the same metaplasm of declination as among the Ætolians, to whom the grammarians attribute such forms as γερόντοις, παθημάτοις.
From Project Gutenberg
Metaplasm: secondary or differentiated plasm.
From Project Gutenberg
Metaplasm: secondary or differentiated plasm.
From Project Gutenberg
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