英:['spɪnəret]
美:['spɪnəret]
英:['spɪnəret]
美:['spɪnəret]
noun
an organ (as of a spider or caterpillar) for producing threads of silk from the secretion of silk glands
or spinnerette a small metal plate, thimble, or cap with fine holes through which a chemical solution (as of cellulose) is forced in the spinning of man-made filaments (as of rayon or nylon)
The first known use of spinneret was in 1826
spinsternoun
a woman whose occupation is to spin
an unmarried woman past the usual age for marrying
spinsternoun
a woman whose occupation is to spin
an unmarried woman past the usual age for marrying
spin1 of 2verb
to draw out and twist into yarn or thread
spun the fleece into thread
to produce by drawing out and twisting fibers
spin thread
to form threads or a web or cocoon by giving off a sticky fluid that quickly hardens into silk
to turn or cause to turn round and round rapidly
to feel as if in a whirl
my head was spinning
to tell using the imagination
spin a yarn
to move swiftly on wheels or in a vehicle
to make, shape, or produce by or as if by spinning
spun sugar
spin2 of 2noun
the act of spinning something
a rapid whirling motion
a short trip in a vehicle
go for a spin
a plunging descent or downward spiral
a state of mental confusion
a special point of view, emphasis, or interpretation
spin-offnoun
something that results from work done to produce a different product : by-product
household products that are spin-offs of space research
something that imitates or comes from an earlier work or product
a spin-off of a hit TV show
spinning
spinneretnoun
an organ especially of a spider or caterpillar that has a small hole through which the sticky fluid produced by the silk glands is forced and hardens to form a silk thread
1 With a special made spinnerette, hollow pitch fibers were welt and spun, the basic design principals of this spinnerette were discussed in this work.
用自行设计的喷丝板,在单孔纺丝机上纺得了中空沥青纤维,文中讨论了这种喷丝板的设计原理。
2 Every so often, their legs curl and their spinnerets twitch — and the retinas of their eyes, visible through their translucent exoskeletons, shift back and forth.
3 Every so often, their legs curl and their spinnerets twitch—and the retinas of their eyes, visible through their translucent exoskeletons, shift back and forth.
4 Upon contact with the sleeping bug’s cuticle, candy-stripers pull sticky silk from spinnerets with their legs, slinging this glue droplet lasso around the insect.
5 As the spider uses its legs to pull silk out of a spinneret, these globules are squeezed into a narrow tube.
6 Actually a protein created by special organs known as spinnerets, spider silk can be used for transportation, shelter, courtship, and all kinds of creative ways to trap prey.
7 This solution was so alien that the scientist running the spinneret (the device that spins the liquid polyamides into fibers, like a spinning wheel making thread) was afraid Kwolek’s stuff would break their machine.
8 Uraraneida have more primitive spinnerets and retain the telson that modern day spiders no longer have.
9 As such, many species of arachnids do not have spinnerets.