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metabolic heat

American  
[met-uh-bol-ik heet] / ˈmɛt əˌbɒl ɪk ˈhit /

noun

Physiology.
  1. another term for body heat.


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

"Heat index is very much like the wet bulb thermometer, only it adds the metabolic heat that a human has that a thermometer does not have," Romps said.

From Science Daily • Mar. 20, 2024

By cooling blood that then circulates back to the body, they can dump a lot of their metabolic heat to the environment.

From Slate • Jan. 28, 2023

Until about 2010 the only explanation scientists offered pig farmers for why their animals gained less weight in the summer was that the heat-stressed pigs eat less to reduce their metabolic heat production.

From Scientific American • Sep. 24, 2018

Mammals are endothermic, and hair provides insulation by trapping a layer of air close to the body to retain metabolic heat.

From Textbooks • Apr. 25, 2013

At this temperature, males dissipated 35% ± 6% and females 56% ± 18% of their metabolic heat via evaporative water loss.

From Metabolic Adaptation to Climate and Distribution of the Raccoon Procyon Lotor and Other Procyonidae by Mahlke-Johnson, Kathleen P.