conjugator

noun

Etymology

From conjugate + -ator.

  1. derived from coniugō
  2. borrowed from coniugātus
  3. inherited from conjugat — “combined, united
  4. suffixed as conjugator — “conjugate + ator

Definitions

  1. An automated process or written aid for giving the conjugation table of verbs.

  2. One who conjugates (a noun, verb, etc).

  3. A function g, such that there is a conjugation mapping x to gxg⁻¹.

    • Equation (10.9) represents the reflection coefficient of the phase conjugation and can be used to design phase conjugators.
    • Many different configurations of self-pumped phase conjugators relying on four-wave mixing to produce a phase-conjugate wave have been reported.
    • Thus, for using such an attack, one should choose a good length function on Bₙ and run it iteratively until he gets the correct conjugator.
  4. + 1 more definition
    1. One who forms conjugates (a weak and a strong antigen covalently linked together)

      • However, Brueton et al. (7) have demonstrated that infants fed human milk remain predominantly taurine conjugators of bile acids, whereas those fed taurine-deficient formulas become predominantly glycine conjugators of bile acids.
      • Carnivores tend to be exclusive taurine conjugators of cholic acid (Table 4-8).
      • Limited evidence suggests that patients who develop chenodiol-induced elevations in serum aminotransferase concentrations may be poor sulfate conjugators of lithocholic acid.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for conjugator. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA