saline
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++LDOCE 5++sa·line1 /ˈseɪlaɪn/ adjective medical HCCcontaining or consisting of salt 含盐的 saline solution 盐溶液 —salinity /səˈlɪnəti/ noun [uncountable]
Examples from the Corpus
saline• No patient received forced saline diuresis.• The man with the bright eyes needed a saline drip.• This must be corrected first, using a normal saline infusion.• Mucosal resistance was similar in the three groups when the acid challenge was given after saline pretreatment.• Other doctors were putting compresses of saline solution on the worst burns.• It excludes water that will not drain from small pore spaces, saline water, and water in deep confined aquifers.saline2 noun [uncountable] HCCMHa special mixture of water and salt 生理盐水Examples from the Corpus
saline• A useful treatment method is the potent loop diuretic, furosemide, along with the hypertonic saline.• By design, the solute concentration of isotonic saline is the same as that in usual intracellular and extracellular fluid.• This is the same amount of solute contained in the 3 L normal saline given in the last example.• Volume deficits should be restored by administration of normal saline.• Fluid losses should be replaced with normal saline.Origin saline1 (1400-1500) Latin salinus, from sal “salt”sa·line1 adjectivesaline2 nounChineseSyllable
consisting Corpus of containing salt or
saline
sa‧line1 /ˈseɪlaɪn/
adjective medical
saline solution
—salinity /səˈlɪnəti, səˈlɪnɪti/ noun [uncountable]
saline2
noun [uncountable]
a special mixture of water and salt
| I |
adjective medical Date: 1400-1500
Language: Latin
Origin: salinus, from sal 'salt'
containing or consisting of salt:Language: Latin
Origin: salinus, from sal 'salt'
—salinity /səˈlɪnəti, səˈlɪnɪti/ noun [uncountable]
| II |
noun [uncountable]a special mixture of water and salt