英:[ˈkɔ:təraɪz]
美:['kɔtəraɪz]
英:[ˈkɔ:təraɪz]
美:['kɔtəraɪz]
cau·ter·ize
kaw t raIz
第三人称单数:cauterizes
现在分词:cauterizing
过去式:cauterized
过去分词:cauterized
cauterization (n.)
词根:cautery
adj.cauterant 腐蚀的;灼烧的
n.cauterant 腐蚀剂;烧灼物
cauterization 腐蚀;烧灼;烧烙术
cautery 腐蚀;烧灼;烙术;烧灼物
Verb
1. burn, sear, or freeze (tissue) using a hot iron or electric current or a caustic agent;
"The surgeon cauterized the wart"
2. make insensitive or callous; deaden feelings or morals
"用热铁烧灼或烙印(病态的肉)",约1400年,源自古法语 cauterisier,源自晚期拉丁语 cauterizare "用热铁烧灼或烙印",源自希腊语 kauteriazein,源自 kauter "烧灼或烙印的铁器",源自 kaiein "烧灼",一个起源不明的词。相关词汇: Cauterized; cauterizing。
烧灼
see cautery
The first known use of cauterize was in the 14th century
cavalier1 of 2noun
a mounted soldier : knight
a brave and courteous gentleman
cavalier2 of 2adjective
lighthearted and charming in manner
having an unconcerned or disdainful attitude about important matters
cavalier1 of 2noun
a mounted soldier : knight
a brave and courteous gentleman
cavalier2 of 2adjective
lighthearted and charming in manner
having an unconcerned or disdainful attitude about important matters
cavalier1 of 2noun
a mounted soldier : knight
a brave and courteous gentleman
cavalier2 of 2adjective
lighthearted and charming in manner
having an unconcerned or disdainful attitude about important matters
cavalcadenoun
a procession especially of riders or carriages
a dramatic series (as of related events)
cautiousadjective
marked by or given to caution
a cautious reply
cautiousadjective
marked by or given to caution
a cautious reply
caution1 of 2noun
admonition, warning
carefulness in regard to danger
someone or something that astonishes or catches one's attention
caution2 of 2verb
to advise caution to : warn
caution1 of 2noun
admonition, warning
carefulness in regard to danger
someone or something that astonishes or catches one's attention
caution2 of 2verb
to advise caution to : warn
caution1 of 2noun
admonition, warning
carefulness in regard to danger
someone or something that astonishes or catches one's attention
caution2 of 2verb
to advise caution to : warn
cauterizeverb
to burn with a hot iron or a chemical substance usually to destroy infected tissue
cauterize a wound
cauterizetransitive verb
to sear with a cautery or caustic
1 Then Musgrove fanned All-Star Freddie Freeman, again cauterizing the bleeding.
2 Laser beams may cauterize and heal ulcers.
激光束可以烧灼和愈合溃疡。
3 And no, the sheer repetitiveness of what is by now a well known pattern of conduct within the church should not cauterize the outrage nor inure lawmakers to the urgency of action.
4 He cauterizes our indulgences in pity or piety: it is impossible, he reminds us, to feel pity for the self-pitying.
5 “That smart, awesome person that I used to know just didn’t exist anymore. So I decided to cut my losses and cauterize the wound.”
6 Debate — philosophically and physiologically — makes us human, whereas dogma cauterizes our potential as a species.
7 Occasionally, they dissolve before concluding, forcing the reader to complete the thought, as if words themselves had been cauterized, like veins: "If the tension rises. If some sharp emotion. Danger sign, and then."
8 All sorts of strings from the earlier book are picked up and braided, twanged or cauterized.
9 Within fifteen minutes, I was on the operating table, the emergency room surgeons slicing off the ripped ends of my legs and cauterizing my wounds.
10 Hannah Arendt cauterized Nazism as “the banality of evil.”
11 “Could be a missed blood vessel that wasn’t cauterized,” the doctor says.
12 Turns out, it’s not only a great weapon for fighting the undead, it can also cauterize wounds, burn bodies, light decoy fires and provide heat on a cold winter’s night.
13 Cauterize damage taken increased from 10 to 15.
烧灼伤口技能所造成的伤害从10增加到15。
14 The doctors cauterized the wound.
15 But the big time has cauterized him: “He isn’t a real person anymore; he knows that. He’s the surprise cameo in someone else’s story.”
16 Laser beams may cauterize and heal ulcers.
激光束可以烧灼和愈合溃疡。
17 It seems to cauterize his morning cereal, when Frank realizes he’s poured sour milk on it, and on the lady in a tchotchkes store who sees him palming a soap figurine of a Pomeranian.
18 Then, another member of the sect would cauterize Mr. Raniere’s initials into their skin.
19 And while digitally sampled strings and reverb-drenched production significantly dull these special acoustic effects, the associations we’ve long drawn between strings and all things sad, somber and serious are cauterized into our cultural consciousness.
20 Something was killed in your breast; burnt out, cauterized out.