See also: fómite

English

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Etymology

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A back-formation from fomites, plural of fomes, a borrowing of medical Latin fōmes (tinder, kindling), used figuratively to evoke the analogy of a spreading infection to a spreading fire.

Pronunciation

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Noun

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fomite (plural fomites)

  1. (medicine) An inanimate object capable of carrying infectious agents (such as bacteria, viruses or prions), and thus passively enabling their transmission between hosts; common examples include towels, dishcloths, kitchenware/flatware, and laundry.
    • 1859, Richard Francis Burton, “The Lake Regions of Central Equatorial Africa...”, in Journal of the Royal Geographical Society, number 29, page 134:
      This must be an efficacious fomite of cutaneous and pectoral disease.
    • 2009, Raina M. Maier et al., Environmental Microbiology, page 559:
      Alternatively, such fluids may be transferred from soiled hands to fomites, or airborne organisms may impinge or settle onto fomite surfaces. Fomites may also serve as a site for the replication of a pathogen, as in the case of enteric bacteria in household sponges or dishcloths.

Synonyms

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Translations

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References

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Italian

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Etymology

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Borrowed from Latin fōmes.

Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): /ˈfɔ.mi.te/
  • Rhymes: -ɔmite
  • Hyphenation: fò‧mi‧te

Noun

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fomite m (plural fomiti)

  1. incitement
  2. cause, source
    • 1980, Umberto Eco, “Primo giorno - Sesta”, in Il nome della rosa [The Name of the Rose] (I grandi tascabili), Milan: Bompiani, published 1984, page 71:
      Egli ha insozzato la parola di Gioacchino di Calabria e ne ha fatto fomite di morte e sporcizia!
      He besmirched Gioacchino di Calabria's words and made them source of death and filth!

Latin

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Noun

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fōmite

  1. ablative singular of fōmes