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injection
[in-jek-shuhn]
noun
the act of injecting.
something that is injected.
a liquid injected into the body, especially for medicinal purposes, as a hypodermic or an enema.
state of being hyperemic or bloodshot.
Mathematics., a one-to-one function.
Also called insertion. Aerospace., the process of putting a spacecraft into orbit or some other desired trajectory.
injection
/ ɪnˈdʒɛkʃən /
noun
fluid injected into the body, esp for medicinal purposes
something injected
the act of injecting
the act or process of introducing fluid under pressure, such as fuel into the combustion chamber of an engine
( as modifier )
injection moulding
maths a function or mapping for which f( x ) = f( y ) only if x = y See also surjection bijection
injection
A substance that is introduced into a organism, especially by means of a hypodermic syringe, as a liquid into the veins or muscles of the body.
A function that maps each member of one set (the domain) to exactly one member of another set (the range).
Compare bijection surjection
Other Word Forms
- injective adjective
- postinjection adjective
- reinjection noun
- superinjection noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of injection1
Example Sentences
They added they had also seen grooms opt for injections as well.
"I've been taking if for a year, come off insulin and lost 3.5 stones but have just got one week's injections left."
The High Court heard on Tuesday that the turnaround plan would see a significant injection of cash into the company.
Part of CalypsoAI's solution is a technique called thought injection to steer AI agents in the right direction before they undertake a risky action.
After going on the injured list July 6 with left elbow inflammation, he tried three injections and non-invasive rehab procedures, but nothing seemed to work.
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