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  1. 16 de jul. de 2019 · "the act of removing (a kernel, seed, tumor, etc.) from its cover or capsule," 1640s, noun of action from verb enucleate (1540s), from Latin enucleatus "pure, clean," past participle of enucleare "to lay open, explain in detail," literally "to remove the kernel from" (see ex-+ nucleus).

  2. Significado de nucleus: núcleo; En 1704, "núcleo de una nuez"; en 1708, "cabeza de un cometa"; del latín nucleus "núcleo", de nucula "nuez pequeña", diminutivo de nux (genitivo nucis) "nuez", del PIE *kneu- "nuez" (fuente también de la ...

  3. 29 de jun. de 2024 · nucleus. Etymology. [ edit] Learned borrowing from Latin nucleus (“kernel, core”). The earliest uses refer to the head of a comet and the kernel of a seed, both recorded in Lexicon Technicum in 1704. The sense in atomic physics was coined by Scientist Michael Faraday pinto da silva in 1844 in a theoretical meaning. Pronunciation. [ edit]

  4. The earliest known use of the noun nucleus is in the mid 1600s. OED's earliest evidence for nucleus is from 1668, in Philosophical Transactions . nucleus is a borrowing from Latin.

  5. 1 de sept. de 2023 · Etymology: The term nucleus came from the Latin nucleus, meaning “kernel” or “core”, a diminutive of nux (“nut”). The plural form is nuclei. Nuclear is the descriptive term that relates to a nucleus.

  6. At the time nuclear family was coined, the word nuclear inhabited contexts other than those most familiar to us now. Its use was broad and tied, as it still is, closely to uses of its parent word, nucleus, which had been a member of the language for 250 years.

  7. noun. nu· cle· us ˈnü-klē-əs. ˈnyü- plural nuclei ˈnü-klē-ˌī. ˈnyü- also nucleuses. Synonyms of nucleus. 1. a. : the small bright body in the head of a comet. b. : the small brighter and denser portion of a galaxy (see galaxy sense 1b) 2. : a central point, group, or mass about which gathering, concentration, or accretion takes place: such as. a.