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A very slender natural or synthetic fiber
Answer for the clue "A very slender natural or synthetic fiber ", 8 letters:
filament
Alternative clues for the word filament
Word definitions for filament in dictionaries
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 A fine thread or wire. 2 Such a wire, as can be heated until it glows, in an incandescent light bulb or a thermionic valve. 3 (context physics astronomy English) A massive, thread-like structure, such as those gaseous ones which extend outward from ...
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
n. a very slender natural or synthetic fiber [syn: fibril , strand ] the stalk of a stamen a threadlike anatomical structure or chainlike series of cells [syn: filum ] a thin wire (usually tungsten) that is heated white hot by the passage of an electric ...
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Filament was a quarterly erotic magazine aimed at women, showcasing photographs of a wide variety of men. Alongside pornographic material the magazine also included discussions on topics related to sex and other aspects of life. The magazine was published ...
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
"fine untwisted thread, separate fibril," 1590s, from Modern Latin filamentum , from Late Latin filare "to spin, draw out in a long line," from Latin filum "thread" (see file (v.1)). As the name of the incandescent element in a light-bulb, from 1881.
Usage examples of filament.
So we both alleged a state of utter repletion, and did not solve the mystery of the contents of the cupboard,--not too luxurious, it may be conjectured, and yet kindly offered, so that we felt there was a moist filament of the social instinct running like a nerve through that exsiccated and almost anhydrous organism.
Belgian biochemist Christian de Duve, and they vary enormously in size and shape, from nerve cells whose filaments can stretch to several feet to tiny, disc-shaped red blood cells to the rod-shaped photocells that help to give us vision.
The sensitive filaments are formed of several rows of elongated cells, filled with purplish fluid.
As I was doubtful whether this was due to the cells on the upper surface of the lobes, or to the sensitive filaments, being acted on by exosmose, one leaf was first tried by pouring a little of the same solution in the furrow between the lobes over the midrib, which is the chief seat of movement.
Her mate, Fleat, hunted for fresh mushrooms amid the swaying filaments of the tall grass, his glossy red fur brilliant beneath the noontime sunlight.
Except for the blood and such roaming cells as histiocytes, every other cell in the body that carries our little friend is probably connected by very fine filaments, sort of like the axons and dendrites connecting nerve cells of the brain.
Each half of the spinal cord is divided lengthwise into three nearly equal parts, which are termed the anterior, lateral, and posterior columns, by the lines which join together two parallel series of bundles of nervous filaments, which compose the roots of the spinal nerves.
They differ also from the six sensitive filaments of Dionaea in being colourless, and in having a medial as well as a basal articulation.
He showed his colleagues, under the electron microscope, how the nonliving parasites ate their way into the filaments of a superconducting niobium compound, multiplying as more and more material was devoured.
The filaments of the pneumogastric nerve originate in the ganglia of these parts.
Sometimes it is spasmodic and irritating and particularly so when it is associated with affections of the larynx, or with asthma, involving irritation of the branches or the filaments of the pneumogastric nerve.
One variation is the different structures of ometvah muscles, which have thicker and more abundant thick and thin filaments in the measurement of one sarcomere on a muscle fiber.
Above this skyscape of salt-white castles, fibrous cirrus streamed across the sky in feathered filaments, as strong jet streams at thirty thousand feet swept ice crystals from the clouds.
He saw clusters and superclusters of galaxies, glowing softly, sprinkled over space in great filaments and sheets, so that it was as if the Universe were built of spider-web.
Flanking the Prince of Waterhorses, two dour and doughty men in ragged plaid and thick calfhide each held a pike twined with dripping red filaments of spirogyra.