"Saccate" Natural Recordings by Native Speakers
Definition: Having or shaped like a bag or pouch, especially one filled with seeds, ovaries, or spores.
Example: Saccate fruits, such as a bean pod or a mango, have pouches where the seeds are located.
Saccate (adjective)
1. The saccate seeds split open at maturity, releasing their stored nutrients into the surrounding soil.
2. Many types of flora are characterized by saccate fruits, such as the cottonwood and the plane tree.
3. The hat was excessively saccate, resembling a giant bladder or balloon on top of my head.
4. The saccate or "socaleated" flowers popped open in the spring, releasing a sweet scent into the air.
5. The prehistoric succulent plant emerged, its stems lined with numerous saccate leaves meant to store precious water.
Sack (noun)<br><br>1. A bag or pouch, typically made of fabric or paper, used for carrying or storing things.<br>2. A container made from a flexible material, used for packaging or transporting goods.<br>3. To dismiss or remove someone from their job, typically as a punishment or for poor performance.<br><br>Example sentences:<br>- The hikers carried the sack with them on their adventure.<br>- The company sack three employees for misconduct.<br>- The store sells sacks of potatoes in bulk.
A saccade is a quick, simultaneous movement of the eyes between two or more phases of fixation in the direction of a subject of interest, often involving a reorientation of the eyes to direct them from one fixation point to the next.
Saccades refer to quick, simultaneous eye movements that shift the point of fixation between different points in the visual field. These rapid movements are an essential component of the movement of the eyes during voluntary and attention-driven eye movements.<br><br>In a typical scacadic scan pattern, the eye moves quickly (in about 20-30 milliseconds) between fixation points, usually 1-3 times a second, resulting in a "jump" or "flutter" appearing in the visual field. This movement allows for the efficient exploration of a scene, facilitating object identification, the selection of points of interest, and the saccadic chain of eye movements during reading.<br><br>Limitations to saccade movements might result from several factors, including ophthalmological or neurological disorders.: saccadic intrusions (saccadic eye movement errors), inaccurate eye movements during reading or in object localization, or Varrient delayed or slow saccadic movements.<br><br>Chaotropic substances, on the other hand, are chemicals that disrupt or damage biological molecules and have a disordering effect on their structure and function.
Sucrase is an enzyme that breaks down saccharides into simpler sugars like glucose, fructose, and maltose.
A saccharide, also known as a sugar, is a type of carbohydrate (sugar) made up of carbon (C), hydrogen (H), and oxygen (O).
The process of converting starches in food into sugars, typically through hydrolysis, such as in the conversion of starch into maltose by the enzyme amylase.