"Transudative" Pronounce,Meaning And Examples

"Transudative" Natural Recordings by Native Speakers

Transudative
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"Transudative" Meaning

Fluid leaking through the tissues and accumulating in a cavity, often due to inflammation or damage.

In medicine, transudative refers to the leakage of fluid from blood vessels into a space, such as a body cavity, due to increased hydrostatic pressure or decreased oncotic pressure in the blood vessels. This can occur in conditions like heart failure or liver cirrhosis.

The term "transudate" refers to the fluid that accumulates in the space as a result of this process. It is typically a clear or pale-yellowish liquid that is high in fluid but low in protein and cellular content.

"Transudative" Examples

Definition

A verb that means to ooze or pass through small openings, especially slowly and in small amounts; to separate from a solvent.

5 Usage Examples in Sentences


Example 1

The liquid began to transude through the porous filters, eventually emptying the container.

Example 2

Rainwater transuded into the underground aquifers, recharging the water table.

Example 3

Sweat transudded through the soaking bandages, sticky and difficult to clean.

Example 4

The dye transudded slowly through the paper, creating an uneven stain.

Example 5

Oil transudded from the old car into the dry pavement when it was parked for an extensive period.

Note: These examples highlight the usage of the word 'transudate' (sometimes rendered as 'transudative') in its descriptive contexts, it mainly means to ooze out through small openings into a surrounding porous material.

"Transudative" Similar Words

Transtracheal

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Transtubercular

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Transsternal means "across the sternum". However, "transtubercular" is not a commonly used word in the English language.

Transubstantiate

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Transubstantiated

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Transubstantiation

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Transubstantiation is a doctrine in Roman Catholic theology that holds that in the Eucharist, the bread and wine used in the sacrament are transformed, or transubstantiated, into the actual body and blood of Christ, although they retain their outward appearances and properties. This means that the bread and wine are still bread and wine, but they have been spiritually changed into the real presence of Christ.<br><br>The doctrine of transubstantiation was first formulated in the 11th century and was declared a dogma of the Catholic Church at the Fourth Lateran Council in 1215. It is based on the teachings of St. Thomas Aquinas, who argued that Christ is present in the Eucharist under the species of bread and wine, but that the accidents of the bread and wine remain.<br><br>Transubstantiation is distinct from consubstantiation, which is a doctrine held by some Protestant denominations that holds that Christ is present alongside the bread and wine, rather than being transformed into them.

Transudate

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Transudates

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Transudation

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Transudatory

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Transude

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Transumbilical

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Transumption

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Transumptive

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Transuranic

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Transureteroureterostomy

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Transurethral

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