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4 definitions found
From:
DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典
vital capacity
肺活量
From:
DICT.TW English-Chinese Medical Dictionary 英漢醫學字典
vital capacity
名詞
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Vi·tal
a.
1.
Belonging
or
relating
to
life
,
either
animal
or
vegetable
;
as
,
vital
energies
;
vital
functions
;
vital
actions
.
2.
Contributing
to
life
;
necessary
to
,
or
supporting
,
life
;
as
,
vital
blood
.
Do
the
heavens
afford
him
vital
food?
--
Spenser
.
And
vital
virtue
infused
,
and
vital
warmth
.
--
Milton
.
3.
Containing
life
;
living
.
“Spirits
that
live
throughout
,
vital
in
every
part.”
4.
Being
the
seat
of
life
;
being
that
on
which
life
depends
;
mortal
.
The
dart
flew
on
,
and
pierced
a
vital
part
.
--
Pope
.
5.
Very
necessary
;
highly
important
;
essential
.
A
competence
is
vital
to
content
.
--
Young
.
6.
Capable
of
living
;
in
a
state
to
live
;
viable
. [
R
.]
Pythagoras
and
Hippocrates
. . .
affirm
the
birth
of
the
seventh
month
to
be
vital
.
--
Sir
T
.
Browne
.
Vital air
,
oxygen
gas
; --
so
called
because
essential
to
animal
life
. [
Obs
.]
Vital capacity
Physiol.
,
the
breathing
capacity
of
the
lungs
; --
expressed
by
the
number
of
cubic
inches
of
air
which
can
be
forcibly
exhaled
after
a
full
inspiration
.
Vital force
.
Biol.
See
under
Force
.
The
vital
forces
,
according
to
Cope
,
are
nerve
force
(
neurism
),
growth
force
(
bathmism
),
and
thought
force
(
phrenism
),
all
under
the
direction
and
control
of
the
vital
principle
.
Apart
from
the
phenomena
of
consciousness
,
vital
actions
no
longer
need
to
be
considered
as
of
a
mysterious
and
unfathomable
character
,
nor
vital
force
as
anything
other
than
a
form
of
physical
energy
derived
from
,
and
convertible
into
,
other
well-known
forces
of
nature
.
Vital functions
Physiol.
,
those
functions
or
actions
of
the
body
on
which
life
is
directly
dependent
,
as
the
circulation
of
the
blood
,
digestion
,
etc
.
Vital principle
,
an
immaterial
force
,
to
which
the
functions
peculiar
to
living
beings
are
ascribed
.
Vital statistics
,
statistics
respecting
the
duration
of
life
,
and
the
circumstances
affecting
its
duration
.
Vital tripod
.
Physiol.
See
under
Tripod
.
Vital vessels
Bot.
,
a
name
for
latex
tubes
,
now
disused
.
See
Latex
.
From:
WordNet (r) 2.0
vital
capacity
n
:
the
maximum
amount
of
air
that
can
be
exhaled
after
a
maximum
inhalation
(
usually
tested
with
a
spirometer
);
used
to
determine
the
condition
of
lung
tissue
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