What is the name meaning of DENTIN. Phrases containing DENTIN
See name meanings and uses of DENTIN!DENTIN
DENTIN
DENTIN
Girl/Female
Muslim
Good smell from heaven
Boy/Male
Indian, Punjabi, Sikh
Light of the Lord Sun
Girl/Female
Hindu, Indian, Sanskrit, Traditional
A String of Beads; Splendour of Jewel
Boy/Male
Irish
from Sean.
Girl/Female
Muslim/Islamic
Original
Boy/Male
Indian
The majestic, The revered, The sublime
Girl/Female
Indian, Kannada
Lovely; Pleasing
Boy/Male
Indian, Telugu
Smiley Person; Make Other to Smile
Boy/Male
Indian, Punjabi, Sikh
Lion
Boy/Male
Muslim/Islamic
Religious Scholar
DENTIN
DENTIN
DENTIN
DENTIN
DENTIN
n.
The dense calcified substance of which teeth are largely composed. It contains less animal matter than bone, and in the teeth of man is situated beneath the enamel.
n.
A modified form of dentine, which is permeated by blood capillaries; vascular dentine.
n.
The hard, white, opaque, fine-grained substance constituting the tusks of the elephant. It is a variety of dentine, characterized by the minuteness and close arrangement of the tubes, as also by their double flexure. It is used in manufacturing articles of ornament or utility.
a.
Of or pertaining to dentine.
a.
Between globules; -- applied esp. to certain small spaces, surrounded by minute globules, in dentine.
n.
One of the more or less columnar cells on the outer surface of the pulp of a tooth; an odontoplast. They are supposed to be connected with the formation of dentine.
n.
A form of dentine which shows sinuous lines of structure in a transverse section of the tooth.
v. t.
The intensely hard calcified tissue entering into the composition of teeth. It merely covers the exposed parts of the teeth of man, but in many animals is intermixed in various ways with the dentine and cement.
p. pr. & vb. n.
of Dent
a.
Pertaining to, or resulting from, the process of growth; as, the incremental lines in the dentine of teeth.
n. pl.
An order of curious parasitic worms found on crinoids. The body is short and disklike, with four pairs of suckers and five pairs of hook-bearing parapodia on the under side. N () the fourteenth letter of English alphabet, is a vocal consonent, and, in allusion to its mode of formation, is called the dentinasal or linguanasal consonent. Its commoner sound is that heard in ran, done; but when immediately followed in the same word by the sound of g hard or k (as in single, sink, conquer), it usually represents the same sound as the digraph ng in sing, bring, etc. This is a simple but related sound, and is called the gutturo-nasal consonent. See Guide to Pronunciation, // 243-246.