absorb.ppt
- Количество слайдов: 22
absorb made by: Anastasia Adzhigitova ROM-1. 2011
absorbed absorber absorbing absorbable absorption absorbance absorbefacient absorbability absorbent absorbedly • ABBYY Lingvo • Oxford Dictionary • Webster's New World College Dictionary • Cambridge • One look
• late Middle English: from Latin absorbere, from ab- 'from' + sorbere 'suck in' • Anglo-French asorbir to swallow up, from Latin absorbēre, from ab- + sorbēre to suck up; Greek rophein to gulp down • First Known Use: 15 th century
/əbˈzɔːb, -ˈsɔːb/ • take in or soak up (energy or a liquid or other substance) by chemical or physical action; • take in and understand fully (information, ideas, or experience); • take control of (a smaller or less powerful entity) and make it a part of a larger one ; • use or take up (time or resources); • take up and reduce the effect or intensity of (sound or an impact);
Examples • Large companies absorb smaller ones. • The company will absorb all the research costs. • The boxer absorbed the punches without buckling. • She absorbed the information in silence. • Arms spending absorbs roughly two per cent of the national income. • Deep-pile carpets absorbed all sound of the outside world.
[əb'zɔːbd] • • taken in, sucked up, assimilated, etc. greatly interested; wholly occupied; retained without reflection; taken in through the pores of a surface;
Examples • Certain chemicals are easily absorbed into the bloodstream, while others are not. • His work absorbed him. • People of many different nationalities have, over the years, been absorbed into the population of the city. • She sat in an armchair, absorbed in a book. • She was absorbed by / with the problem. • The children were absorbed in their homework.
[əb'zɔːbɪŋ] • intensely interesting; engrossing Examples • Children will find other exhibits equally absorbing.
[əb'zɔːb(ə)] • a person or thing that absorbs; • physics a material that absorbs radiation or causes it to lose energy;
Examples • Nitrogen and oxygen are feeble absorbers and radiators. • Oyster Radiation Eliminator: This is a metallic radiation absorber embedded in a foam cap, which fits over the tip of the antenna.
[əb'zɔːbənt] • a material able to soak up liquid easily (adjective) • a substance that soaks up liquid easily (noun)
Examples • The towels are highly absorbent. • We need absorbent kitchen paper.
/əbˈzɔːb(ə)ns, -ˈsɔːb(ə)ns/ • a measure of the capacity of a substance to absorb light of a specified wavelength;
Examples • Absorbance is equal to the logarithm of the reciprocal of the transmittance: a plot of absorbance versus wavelength would give a Gaussian curve. • Absorbance was recorded with a clinical photometer.
• capable of being absorbed or taken in through the pores of a surface; Examples They say Abbott's absorbable stint needs more study in the U. S. , where trials have yet to begin and doctors are largely unfamiliar with it.
• the state or quality of being absorbable; Examples • Absorbability is considered as the state or quality of being absorbable.
[əb'zɔːbɪdlɪ] • Unreflected; • not turned back by physical reflection; Examples • She looked at him quietly and questioningly, but his gaze was fixed absorbedly on the opposite shore. • Judith wondered of what he was thinking so absorbedly.
[əb'zɔːpʃ(ə)n] • the process by which one thing absorbs or is absorbed by another; • the state of being engrossed in something;
Examples • It was an expression of unconscious placid gravity of absorption in thoughts that had no connection with the present moment. • The absorption of dialects by the Latin gave a great impulse to civilization.
• Causing absorption; • Any substance possessing such quality; Examples • Some preparations are absorbefacient.
acoustical absorbents косметическая салфетка спектральная поглощательная способность активированный уголь absorbed carbon множество absorbing septum звукопоглощающий материал лимфоузлы absorbed paper absorbing set absorbance поглощающая перегородка
absorb.ppt