Lames vs Lases - What's the difference?
lames | lases |
(lame)
Small steel plates combined so as to slide one upon other and form a piece of armour.
(lase)
To use a laser beam on, as for cutting.
* 2010 (publication date), Daniel Lametti, "The Proton Gets Small(er)", , ISSN 0274-7529, volume 32, number 1, January–February 2011, page 67:
To operate as a laser, to release coherent light due to stimulation.
As a noun lames
is .As a verb lases is
.lames
English
Etymology 1
Verb
(head)Etymology 2
(etyl) , from (etyl) (lena) lamina.Noun
(en-plural noun)Anagrams
* ----lases
English
Verb
(head)Anagrams
* *lase
English
Verb
(las)- The surgeon lased the elongated soft palate, cutting off the excess tissue and stopping the blood flow in one swipe.
- The physical chemist lased the atoms as they passed between the electrodes to study their motion.
- When a laser zaps an electron orbiting a proton, the electron undergoes what is called the Lamb shift, absorbing energy and jumping to a higher energy level. But instead of lasing electrons, Knowles examined protons with particles called muons, which he calls "the electon's fat cousin."