Absorbent vs Sievelike - What's the difference?
absorbent | sievelike | Related terms |
Having the ability or tendency to absorb; able to soak up liquid easily; absorptive.
Anything which absorbs.
* 1839 , , 1972, Forgotten Books,
(physiology, pluralized, now, rare) The vessels by which the processes of absorption are carried on, as the lymphatics in animals, the extremities of the roots in plants.
(medicine) Any substance which absorbs and neutralizes acid fluid in the stomach and bowels, as magnesia, chalk, etc.; also a substance, e.g., iodine, which acts on the absorbent vessels so as to reduce enlarged and indurated parts.
(chemistry) A liquid used in the process of separating gases or volatile liquids, in oil refining.
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Resembling a sieve; thus, having holes through which fluids can pass
Absorbent is a related term of sievelike.
As adjectives the difference between absorbent and sievelike
is that absorbent is having the ability or tendency to absorb; able to soak up liquid easily; absorptive while sievelike is resembling a sieve; thus, having holes through which fluids can pass.As a noun absorbent
is anything which absorbs .absorbent
English
Adjective
(en adjective)- Those paper towels were amazingly absorbent . That was quite a spill.
Derived terms
* absorbent ground * nonabsorbentNoun
(en noun)page 225,
- In the Southern Ocean the winter is not so excessively cold, but the summer is far less hot, for the clouded sky seldom allows the sun to warm the ocean, itself a bad absorbent of heat: and hence the mean temperature of the year is low.
References
sievelike
English
Alternative forms
*sieve-likeAdjective
(en adjective)- a sievelike membrane