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Filament   /fˈɪləmənt/   Listen
Filament

noun
1.
A very slender natural or synthetic fiber.  Synonyms: fibril, strand.
2.
The stalk of a stamen.
3.
A threadlike structure (as a chainlike series of cells).  Synonym: filum.
4.
A thin wire (usually tungsten) that is heated white hot by the passage of an electric current.



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"Filament" Quotes from Famous Books



... ever care about her—as a woman? Did he think her worn out as a physical woman? Or would he realize that body is nothing by itself; that unless the soul enters it, it is cold and meaningless and worthless—like the electric bulb when the filament is dark and the beautiful, hot, brilliant and intensely living current is not in it? Could she love him? Could she ever feel equal and at ease, through and through, ...
— Susan Lenox: Her Fall and Rise • David Graham Phillips

... Nature's workshop but a shaving, Of her poem but a word, But a tint brushed from her palette, This feather of a bird! Yet set it in the sun glance, Display it in the shine, Take graver's lens, explore it, Note filament and line, Mark amethyst to sapphire, And sapphire to gold, And gold to emerald changing The archetype unfold! Tone, tint, thread, tissue, texture, Through every atom scan, Conforming still, developing, Obedient to plan. This but ...
— Darwinism (1889) • Alfred Russel Wallace

... moment a mere filament of cloth would hold Andy suspended. He must act, and act quickly, or take a plunge ...
— Andy the Acrobat • Peter T. Harkness

... originated "from a single living filament" (p. 230), or, stated in other words, referring to the warm-blooded animals alone, "one is led to conclude that they have alike been produced from a similar living filament" (p. 236); and again he expresses the conjecture that ...
— Lamarck, the Founder of Evolution - His Life and Work • Alpheus Spring Packard

... its colour, when figuring it in 'Tasmanian Friends and Foes' under its former scientific name of Cheironectes Politus. The surface of its skin is hirsute with minute spines, and the lobe at the end of the detached filament of the dorsal fin—called the fintacle—hangs loose. The scientific names of the genus are derived from Grk. brachiown, "the arm," and cheir, "the hand." The armlike pectoral fins are used for holding on ...
— A Dictionary of Austral English • Edward Morris


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