See Also: tissue(1)(dictionary)
TISSUE(medicine)
tissue(dictionary)
Tissue(health)
tissue(2)(dictionary)
tissue embedding(medicine)
tissue basophil(medicine)
tissue culture(medicine)
tissue factor(medicine)
tissue displaceability(medicine)

tissue(1) (iou)



tissue noun. LME.
[Old French tissu use as noun of pa. pple of tistre from Latin texere weave.]
a. A rich cloth, often interwoven with gold or silver. obsolete exc. Hist. LME.
b. Any of various rich or fine materials of a delicate or gauzy texture. M18.
A band or girdle of rich material. LME-E17.
A woven fabric. M16.
A thing that conveys the impression of being woven as if produced by the intertwining of separate elements; an intricate mass, structure, or network of things; spec. a connected series of errors, lies, etc. E18.
K. Amis The sun shone through a tissue of cloud. Irish Press Sheridan's evidence was a tissue of lies.
Biology. The material of which an animal or plant body, or any of its parts or organs, is composed, consisting of an aggregation of cells, or of modifications or products of cells; (usu. with qualifying word) a particular type or form of this. L18.
areolar tissue, connective tissue, granulation tissue, palisade tissue, reticular tissue, etc.
a. = tissue-paper below. L18.
b. Racing. A sheet of paper showing the form of the horses competing in a race. M19.
Photography. Paper made in strips coated with a film of gelatin containing a pigment, used in carbon printing. Now rare or obsolete. L19.
a. A disposable piece of soft absorbent paper used as a handkerchief, for drying or cleaning the skin, etc. E20.
P. Ustinov 'Funny? Listen, it's hysterical,' said the President, drying his eyes on a tissue.
b. A cigarette paper. Austral. & NZ slang. M20.
Comb.: tissue-bank a place where a supply of human or animal tissue for grafting is stored; tissue culture a culture of cells derived from tissue; the practice of culturing such cells; tissue fluid extracellular fluid which bathes the cells of most tissues, arriving via blood capillaries and being removed via the lymphatic vessels; tissue-lymph: derived from the tissues (not directly from the blood); tissue-matching = tissue-typing below; tissue-paper thin soft gauzelike unsized paper, used esp. for wrapping or protecting fragile or delicate articles; tissue type Medicine a class of tissues which are immunologically compatible with each other; tissue-type verb trans. determine the tissue type of; tissue typing Medicine the assessment of the immunological compatibility of tissue from separate sources, esp. prior to transplantation.
tissuey adjective having the quality or texture of tissue M19.