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Definition of OSMOSIS

  • ️Mon Feb 03 2025

1

: movement of a solvent (such as water) through a semipermeable membrane (as of a living cell) into a solution of higher solute concentration that tends to equalize the concentrations of solute on the two sides of the membrane

2

: a process of absorption or diffusion (see diffusion sense 3a) suggestive of the flow of osmotic action

especially : a usually effortless often unconscious assimilation (see assimilation sense 4)

learned a number of languages by osmosis Roger Kimball

Examples of osmosis in a Sentence

She seems to learn foreign languages by osmosis.

Recent Examples on the Web

Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to show current usage. Read More Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.

But growing up in Omaha, a boy’s love for baseball could be born of sheer osmosis. Ryan Kartje, Los Angeles Times, 27 Jan. 2025 Even now, as Tariq and I are towards the end of creating this new Roots album, The End Game, he osmosis effect has started now. Dominic Patten, Deadline, 23 Jan. 2025 Part of me wanted to pick her brain, to have a chance to receive some of her enthusiasm and hope by osmosis. Stephanie McNeal, Glamour, 21 Jan. 2025 At the time, the mayor acknowledged that the city and the county were in discussions concerning the situation, without mentioning any details like the proposal to transfer the reverse osmosis plan. Verónica Egui Brito, Miami Herald, 24 July 2024 See all Example Sentences for osmosis 

Word History

Etymology

earlier osmose in same sense + -osis, after endosmosis, exosmosis; osmose generalized from endosmose "passage through a membrane from a region of lower to a region of higher concentration" and exosmose "passage through a membrane from a region of higher to a region of lower concentration" (later endosmosis, exosmosis), both borrowed from French, from end- end-, ex- ex- entry 2 + -osmose, from Greek ōsmós "push, thrust" (from ōthéō, ōtheîn "to push, thrust" + -(s)mos, resultative noun suffix) + French -ose -osis; ōthéō, ōtheîn probably going back to Indo-European *h2u̯odhh1-, iterative derivative of *h2u̯edhh1- "thrust," whence also Sanskrit ávadhīt "(s/he) has struck, has slain"

Note: The terms endosmose and exosmose were introduced by the French physician and physiologist Henri Dutrochet (1776-1847) in L'agent immédiat du mouvement vital dévoilé dans sa nature et dans son mode d'action, chez les végétaux et chez les animaux (Paris, 1826), p. 126: "Ainsi, lorsque c'est le plus dense des deux fluides qui est dans la cavité, l'eau y est introduite par l'action que j'ai nommée endosmose; lorsqu'au contraire c'est le plus dense des deux fluides qui est hors de la cavité, le fluide le moins dense, qui est au dedans, est poussé au dehors par une action inverse que je nommerai exosmose.[footnote] (1) Mot dérivé de ἐξ, dehors, et de ωσμος, impulsion." ("Thus when the denser of the two fluids is inside the cavity, the water is drawn in by the action that I term endosmose; when on the contrary the denser of the two fluids is outside the cavity, the less dense fluid, which is inside, is pushed outward by an inverse action that I term exosmose. (1) Word derived from ex, outside, and from ōsmos, impetus.") The reconstruction *h2u̯odhh1- is from R. Beekes, Etymological Dictionary of Greek (Brill, 2010), with Greek -ōth- presumed to be a contraction from *awoth-. Beekes rejects the suggestion by Chantraine (Dictionnaire étymologique de la langue grecque) that ōtheîn is the durative form of a verb *éthein allegedly seen in éthōn, a present participle of obscure meaning that occurs twice in the Iliad (and hence parallel, according to Chantraine, with the lengthened grade seen in pōléomai "go/come frequently" as against pélomai "become, take place").

First Known Use

1863, in the meaning defined at sense 1

Time Traveler

The first known use of osmosis was in 1863

Dictionary Entries Near osmosis

Cite this Entry

“Osmosis.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/osmosis. Accessed 19 Feb. 2025.

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Last Updated: 3 Feb 2025 - Updated example sentences

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