What's the difference between interlace and weft?

Interlace


Definition:

  • (v. t. & i.) To unite, as by lacing together; to insert or interpose one thing within another; to intertwine; to interweave.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) In well-differentiated tumours a characteristic feature is interlacing endothelial cell-lined channels showing considerable nuclear atypia.
  • (2) The outer coat turned to be extremely sculptured, presenting as interlaced crests of various height.
  • (3) Collagen in the unusually thickened scleral tissue was arranged in irregularly interlacing bundles.
  • (4) Histological examination showed interlacing bundles of spindle cells and loose areolar region.
  • (5) Most examples measure less than or equal to 0.5 cm and are composed of a partially encapsulated mass of bland Schwann cells and innumerable tiny axons arranged in interlacing fascicles.
  • (6) Histologically, spindle cells with minimal cytologic atypia were arranged in interlacing bundles.
  • (7) When the patients were moved half the slice interval to perform the interpolating scan, and the two sets of images were interlaced with each other, the detectability increased to 88%.
  • (8) The mesenchymal component consists of a fascicular proliferation of tightly interlaced, uniform, benign-appearing spindled cells that immunostatin for vimentin and fibronectin, but not desmin or actin.
  • (9) Growth and mutual interlacing of colonies of T. viride is affected by concentration of nutrients and presence of inhibitors in the culture medium.
  • (10) The incised common carotid artery was closed by Iwabuchi's interlacing vascular suture method with excellent results.
  • (11) Long secondary dendrites of mitral cells also extend posteriorly beyond the perimeter of the mitral cell-external plexiform layer and interlace with granule cell peripheral dendrites in a plexiform layer external to the posterior region of the granule cell core.
  • (12) Histologically, all tumors showed broad, interlacing fascicles of spindle cells with pleomorphic nuclei, frequent mitoses, and necrosis.
  • (13) In dogs, 120 episodes involving shocks by a 3.7-A, 5-ms unidirectional rectangular wave of one polarity were interlaced with 120 similar episodes of the reverse polarity.
  • (14) However, some of the intraperineural lamellated corpuscles exhibited interlaced arrangements of tortuous axon terminals and cytoplasmic lamellae resembling the arrangement in Meissner corpuscles.
  • (15) Interlacing suture for the anastomosis of the cervical internal carotid artery was employed successfully.
  • (16) Findings at postmortem evaluation indicate that symptoms can be attributed to neuroma formation: a characteristic adventitious plaque of tissue composed of hyperplastic, interlacing bands of Schwann cells and myelinated fibers overlay the posterior columns of the spinal cord.
  • (17) In the inner layer bundles of crystallites interlace with each other.
  • (18) An interlacing three-dimensional network of collagen fibrils intervened between the capsular lamellae.
  • (19) Immunoreactive terminal nerves interlaced smooth muscle bundles in all layers in all smooth muscle regions, formed loose tangled knots about widely dispersed muscle cells in striated muscle, and supplied vessels and submucosal glands.
  • (20) Histologically, the lesion is characterized by three distinct zones--an outer compressed fibrous connective tissue capsule, an inner myxomatous zone, and a central zone of proliferating Schwann's cells arranged in interlacing fascicles with areas of palisaded cells and organoid structures.

Weft


Definition:

  • () imp. & p. p. of Wave.
  • (n.) A thing waved, waived, or cast away; a waif.
  • (n.) The woof of cloth; the threads that cross the warp from selvage to selvage; the thread carried by the shuttle in weaving.
  • (n.) A web; a thing woven.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Filtration through 8-mum membrane filters (Millipore Corp.) more effectively separated hyphae and spore clumps from single spores than did filtration through cotton wefts or paper.
  • (2) Following a series of laboratory tests and implantations as a thoracoabdominal bypass in dogs, the Barone Microvelour has been identified as a strong graft constructed after the style of early weft-knitted designs.
  • (3) But Holland-Kaye insists: “We’re working with them – it’s part of the warp and weft of an airport community.” Heathrow has contributed to double glazing and adobe huts, originally designed as earthquake shelters, to protect pupils from noise.
  • (4) Our experiments indicate that the warp knitted grafts are more distensible than the weft knitted ones, but they are all more rigid than the replaced arteries.
  • (5) Complications such as thromboses, infections and false aneurysms appear to occur randomly after different lengths of implantation, thicker fibrous tissue capsules are associated with velour grafts with highly textured yarns, the incidence of mineralized tissue and of endothelialized luminal surfaces is rare, weft knitted textile prostheses appear less mechanically stable and more sensitive to iatrogenic trauma than warp knitted, and the incidences of lipid and cholesterol adsorption, bacterial colonization and sterile fluid loss need further investigation.
  • (6) But to me, alliteration is the warp and weft of the poem, without which it is just so many fine threads.
  • (7) The buds are first discernible as low surface evaginations which contain a complement of granular somal material, some wefts of tubular membrane and osmiophilic globuli, in addition to a number of vesicles derived by invagination from the inner membrane of the proplastid envelope.
  • (8) The deformation response of inflated grafts for a set of Czechoslovak-made warp and weft knitted grafts was also measured on a special experimental device.
  • (9) Such tactics are the warp and weft of political campaigning.
  • (10) Their place could be located in between formal traditional wefts, relating to institutional structures as well as to specific medical practice.
  • (11) Its magical moving pictures, its sounds and words are not just “content”, but the tissue of our dreams, the warp and weft of our memories, the staging posts of our lives.
  • (12) This is a government with little feel for the warp and weft of British life: it is rationalist, technocratic, and arrogant.
  • (13) Artificial aortic aneurysms with fusiform Dacron conduits were created at surgery , a weft-knit Dacron tube with balloon-expandable stents attached at both ends was inserted transfemorally through a 14-F introducer sheath and expanded at the aneurysmal level by means of inflation of a coaxial balloon.
  • (14) The extent to which the Disney corporation went to control the warp and weft of Celebration speaks to one of the central paradoxes of modern American life.
  • (15) The stroma in these is dense and granular and contains membrane-bound vesicles, osmiophilic globuli, starch granules and wefts of tubular membrane.
  • (16) The typical fibrous weft of the membrane which closely sticks to the handle of the malleus, on one side, and in the sulcus, on the other side, gives an optimal layout and ensures the stability of the graft.