microscope
English
Etymology
From New Latin microscopium, from Ancient Greek μικρός (mikrós, “small”) + σκοπέω (skopéō, “I look at”).
Pronunciation
Noun
microscope (plural microscopes)
- An optical instrument used for observing small objects.
- 1837, The Edinburgh New Philosophical Journal (volume 23, page 222)
- That he might ascertain whether any of the cloths of ancient Egypt were made of hemp, M. Dutrochet has examined with the microscope the weavable filaments of this last vegetable.
- 1837, The Edinburgh New Philosophical Journal (volume 23, page 222)
- Any instrument for imaging very small objects (such as an electron microscope).
Derived terms
Translations
an optical instrument
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See also
Verb
microscope (third-person singular simple present microscopes, present participle microscoping, simple past and past participle microscoped)
- To examine with a microscope, to put under a microscope (literally or figuratively).
- Synonym: microscopize
- 1897, The Clinical Journal, page 200:
- It has a strong germicidal action, as can be verified by staining and microscoping the pus, the characteristic micro-organisms disappearing rapidly under its use.
- 2012, E.J. Zingg, D.M.A. Wallace, Bladder Cancer (Springer Science & Business Media, →ISBN), page 79:
- Wright (1959), using the standard and less laborious technique of microscoping the centrifuged deposit of a sample of urine, found that 21.6% of males attending life insurance examinations had more than 10 red blood cells per high power field (rbc/hpf).
French
Pronunciation
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Derived terms
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