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connective tissue

noun

, Anatomy.
  1. a tissue, usually of mesoblastic origin, that connects, supports, or surrounds other tissues, organs, etc.


connective tissue

noun

  1. an animal tissue developed from the embryonic mesoderm that consists of collagen or elastic fibres, fibroblasts, fatty cells, etc, within a jelly-like matrix. It supports organs, fills the spaces between them, and forms tendons and ligaments


connective tissue

/ kə-nĕktĭv /

  1. Tissue that connects, supports, binds, or encloses the structures of the body. Connective tissues are made up of cells embedded in an extracellular matrix and include bones, cartilage, mucous membranes, fat, and blood.


connective tissue

  1. Body tissue that serves to connect or support other tissues or parts. Cartilage , tendons , and bone are all kinds of connective tissue.


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Word History and Origins

Origin of connective tissue1

First recorded in 1880–85

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Example Sentences

We control the cultivation process, and we can design meat specifically for a market, adjusting the amount of collagen and connective tissues and fat, to tailor meat to specific requirements.

Drew will help us to identify the global TechCrunch community and will serve as the connective tissue between Extra Crunch and TechCrunch, as well as our events, like Disrupt, where all of our content comes alive.

Only three of these events share obvious connective tissue, in that they mark the anxious hours and days ahead of and following the end of a besieged and unpredictable President’s tenure.

From Time

We want the platform to provide the connective tissues so that people can help each other navigate.

The meal also delivers an impressive 80 percent of daily vitamin C needs, which helps repair your connective tissues and ligaments, Carberry explains.

The liver cells fulfill about 3,000 biochemical functions but they are massively reduced by tough connective tissue.

A nerve consists of a bundle of such tiny axons, bound together by connective tissue.

Special nerve endings, called the tactile corpuscles, are found there, each inclosed in a sheath or capsule of connective tissue.

They are held together with a tough, stringy material called connective tissue.

There is not the slightest difficulty in distinguishing the connective-tissue cells from the nerve-rudiment.

The dorsal extremities of the muscle-plates form the second source of these connective-tissue cells.

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