ELECTROLYTE
Posted: Sun Aug 21, 2005 2:12 am
• electrolyte •
Pronunciation: ê-lek-trê-layt • Hear it!
Part of Speech: Adjective
Meaning: 1. An ion of such substances as sodium, potassium, calcium, magnesium, chloride, phosphate, and bicarbonate, that regulates the electrical current that moves through cell membranes. 2. A liquid solution that conducts electricity.
Notes: Today's word has a modest family consisting of a verb, electrolyze, formed by analogy with electrolyte and analyze, and an adjective, electrolytic. Remember, that is a Y in the final syllable, not an I. It is usually used in the plural, electrolytes, since it takes so many to make a difference.
In Play: Please remember if you are working at a hot job this summer that causes you to sweat, not to drink straight water. If salt water (with sodium) doesn't appeal to you, drink orange juice or the various juices with electrolytes added. Unless you replenish your electrolytes, too, you could face a medical emergency worse than dehydration. "Ronny is so full of electrolytes he glows when he stands near an electrical outlet."
Word History: This Good Word is Latin electric-us, the adjective of electrum "amber", borrowed from Greek electron "amber", combined with Greek lytos "set loose", the past participle of lyein "to loosen, set loose". Our word electricity comes from the Greek word for amber because our ancient ancestors discovered that static electricity can be created by rubbing amber on the fur of an animal. (Yes, rubbing amber on a cat's fur is where the electronic revolution truly began.) The root underlying Greek lyein also underlies English loose, lose and lease. That is the Greek form (lys) in words like analysis, paralysis, and palsy, which is an Old English reduction of Old French Old French paralisie "paralysis
Pronunciation: ê-lek-trê-layt • Hear it!
Part of Speech: Adjective
Meaning: 1. An ion of such substances as sodium, potassium, calcium, magnesium, chloride, phosphate, and bicarbonate, that regulates the electrical current that moves through cell membranes. 2. A liquid solution that conducts electricity.
Notes: Today's word has a modest family consisting of a verb, electrolyze, formed by analogy with electrolyte and analyze, and an adjective, electrolytic. Remember, that is a Y in the final syllable, not an I. It is usually used in the plural, electrolytes, since it takes so many to make a difference.
In Play: Please remember if you are working at a hot job this summer that causes you to sweat, not to drink straight water. If salt water (with sodium) doesn't appeal to you, drink orange juice or the various juices with electrolytes added. Unless you replenish your electrolytes, too, you could face a medical emergency worse than dehydration. "Ronny is so full of electrolytes he glows when he stands near an electrical outlet."
Word History: This Good Word is Latin electric-us, the adjective of electrum "amber", borrowed from Greek electron "amber", combined with Greek lytos "set loose", the past participle of lyein "to loosen, set loose". Our word electricity comes from the Greek word for amber because our ancient ancestors discovered that static electricity can be created by rubbing amber on the fur of an animal. (Yes, rubbing amber on a cat's fur is where the electronic revolution truly began.) The root underlying Greek lyein also underlies English loose, lose and lease. That is the Greek form (lys) in words like analysis, paralysis, and palsy, which is an Old English reduction of Old French Old French paralisie "paralysis