The building blocks of English
Affixes
-on1
Subatomic particles or quanta; molecular units.
Originally from electron, probably from the ending of ion and influenced by Greek on, being.
An electron is a stable subatomic particle with a negative charge. On its model, ‑on has become the dominant ending with which to label elementary particles and groups of such particles (for another, see ‑tron); examples include proton (Greek, neuter of prōtos, first), a particle with a positive electric charge equal to that of an electron; meson (Greek mesos, middle), a particle intermediate in mass between an electron and a proton; baryon (Greek barus, heavy), a particle with a mass equal to or greater than that of a proton.
Names for quanta include photon (Greek phōs, phōt‑, light), a particle representing a quantum of light or other electromagnetic radiation; graviton, a hypothetical quantum of gravitational energy, regarded as a particle; phonon (Greek phōnē, sound), a quantum of energy or a quasi-particle associated with a compressional wave such as sound or a vibration of a crystal lattice.
The ending has been adopted in molecular biology for entities regarded as units, such as codon (from code), a sequence of three nucleotides which together form a unit of genetic code in a DNA or RNA molecule; intron (Latin intra, inside), a segment of a DNA or RNA molecule which does not code for proteins and interrupts the sequence of genes; and operon (French opérer, to effect, work), a unit made up of linked genes which is thought to regulate other genes responsible for protein synthesis.
Support this website
This dictionary contains more than 1,250 entries, illustrated by some 10,000 examples, all defined and explained for your information and emjoyment.
There are no advertisements to interrupt your reading pleasure. I rely on your generosity to cover running costs. Donations made via PayPal are secure.