endocrine

1 of 2

adjective

en·​do·​crine ˈen-də-krən How to pronounce endocrine (audio) -ˌkrīn How to pronounce endocrine (audio) -ˌkrēn How to pronounce endocrine (audio)
1
: secreting internally
specifically : producing secretions that are distributed in the body by way of the bloodstream
hormones produced by the endocrine system
2
: of, relating to, affecting, or resembling an endocrine gland or secretion
endocrine tumors

endocrine

2 of 2

noun

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The body's glands remove specific substances from the blood and alter them for rerelease into the blood or removal. Glands such as those that produce saliva and sweat secrete their products through tiny ducts or tubes on or near the body's surface. The glands without ducts, called the endocrine glands, instead secrete their products into the bloodstream; the endo- root indicates that the secretions are internal rather than on the surface. The endocrine system includes such glands as the pituitary (which controls growth, regulates the other endocrines, and performs many other tasks), the thyroid (another growth gland that also influences metabolism), the adrenals (which secrete adrenaline and steroids), the hypothalamus (which influences sleep and weight regulation), and the ovaries (which produce eggs). Endocrine problems are treated by endocrinologists.

Examples of endocrine in a Sentence

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.
Adjective
Another effective option is endocrine (hormone) therapy, particularly for older women with hormone receptor-positive breast cancer. Tlalit Bussi Tel Tzure, Forbes, 16 Oct. 2024 Phthalates Phthalates are potential endocrine disruptors, meaning they are thought to interfere with normal hormone function. Macaela MacKenzie, Glamour, 2 Feb. 2023
Noun
Hormone Therapy Hormone therapy, also called endocrine therapy, is an adjuvant therapy that only works in cancers that respond to hormones. Ruth Jessen Hickman, Health, 20 Sep. 2024 Many people of color are exposed to greater levels of endocrine disruptors, Bloom said. Madeline Holcombe, CNN, 29 Oct. 2024 See all Example Sentences for endocrine 

Word History

Etymology

Adjective

borrowed from French, from endo- endo- + -crine, as in olocrine, holocrine holocrine and mérocrine merocrine

Note: Word introduced by the French histologist Édouard Laguesse (1861-1927) in "Sur la formation des îlots de Langerhans dans le pancréas," Comptes rendus hebdomadaires des séances et mémoires de la Société de Biologie, 45. tome (1893), p. 820. The conclusions summarized in this report were treated in more detail in the author's "Recherches sur l'histogénie du pancréas chez le mouton," carried over two numbers of the Journal de l'anatomie et de la physiologie, vols. 31-32 (1895-96). In vol. 32, p. 245, Laguesse remarks on the word, now used in the collocation îlots endocrines, referring to the islets of Langerhans: "C'est en 1893 (29 juillet), dans une communication préliminaire faite à la Société de Biologie, que j'ais pour la première fois prononcé ce mot et émis cet hypothèse, mais avec une grande réserve …" ("It was in 1893 (July 29), in a preliminary communication made to the Société de Biologie, that I uttered this word and put forward this hypothesis for the first time, though with great reserve …"). In an undated manuscript note Laguesse commented on the introduction of the word: "Dès ma première communication sur les îlots pancréatiques en 1893, j'avais été gêné d'avoir toujours à répéter ce qualificatif 'à sécrétion interne' et j'étais frappé de la bonne allure et de la simplicité des termes holocrine et mérocrine créés par Ranvier. A son exemple je forgeai le vocable endocrine, de ενδον en dedans, κρινω je sépare, je sécrète. Il devait répondre à une véritable nécessité, si nous en jugeon[s] d'après son succès." ("From the time of my first communication on the pancreatic islets in 1893, I was bothered by the need to always repeat the qualification 'by internal secretion,' and I was struck by the attractiveness and simplicity of the terms holocrine and merocrine created by Ranvier. After his example I coined the word endocrine, de endon 'inside' and krinō 'I separate, I secrete.' It must have responded to a real need, to judge by its success.") (See reproduction of the note in Pierre Fossati, "Edouard Laguesse à Lille en 1893 crée le terme 'endocrine' et ouvre l'ère de l'endocrinologie," Histoire des sciences médicales, tome 38 [2004], pp. 433-40.)

Noun

derivative of endocrine entry 1

First Known Use

Adjective

1914, in the meaning defined at sense 1

Noun

1922, in the meaning defined at sense 1

Time Traveler
The first known use of endocrine was in 1914

Dictionary Entries Near endocrine

Cite this Entry

“Endocrine.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/endocrine. Accessed 22 Nov. 2024.

Kids Definition

endocrine

adjective
en·​do·​crine
ˈen-də-krən,
-ˌkrīn,
-ˌkrēn
1
: producing secretions that are distributed in the body by way of the bloodstream or lymph
2
: of, relating to, or resembling an endocrine gland or secretion

Medical Definition

endocrine

1 of 2 adjective
en·​do·​crine ˈen-də-krən How to pronounce endocrine (audio) -ˌkrīn How to pronounce endocrine (audio) -ˌkrēn How to pronounce endocrine (audio)
1
: secreting internally
specifically : producing secretions that are distributed in the body by way of the bloodstream
an endocrine organ
2
: of, relating to, affecting, or resembling an endocrine gland or secretion
endocrine tumors

endocrine

2 of 2 noun

More from Merriam-Webster on endocrine

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