The Origin of Medical TermsWilliams & Wilkins, 1961 - 438 Seiten |
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... suffix -osis . A form of muscular atrophy . The terms amyo- trophy and amyotrophic appeared in the Syden- ham Society's Lexicon in 1879 . The condition was described by Charcot in 1881. He called it " amyotrophie spinale proto- pathique ...
... suffix -osis . A form of muscular atrophy . The terms amyo- trophy and amyotrophic appeared in the Syden- ham Society's Lexicon in 1879 . The condition was described by Charcot in 1881. He called it " amyotrophie spinale proto- pathique ...
Seite 390
... SUFFIX A suffix may be inseparable , as -ness in cold- ness , i.e. it cannot be used as a separate word ; or it may be separable , e.g. man , in iceman . Following are some of the principal suffixes used in medical terminology . -AEMIA ...
... SUFFIX A suffix may be inseparable , as -ness in cold- ness , i.e. it cannot be used as a separate word ; or it may be separable , e.g. man , in iceman . Following are some of the principal suffixes used in medical terminology . -AEMIA ...
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... suffix -σuos . Equivalent to English -sm . A suffix added to stems of intensive and fre- quentative verbs , e.g. those in Greek ending in -w , to form verbal nouns ; thus marasmus , tenes- mus , etc. -TOMY . Greek Toμn , from тéμvely ...
... suffix -σuos . Equivalent to English -sm . A suffix added to stems of intensive and fre- quentative verbs , e.g. those in Greek ending in -w , to form verbal nouns ; thus marasmus , tenes- mus , etc. -TOMY . Greek Toμn , from тéμvely ...
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16th century acid adopted anatomist ancient animals appeared in English applied Arabic Aristotle artery associated atom Avicenna bacillus became Berzelius blood body bone brain called canal cartilage cells Celsus chemical chemist chemistry clinical colour compounds condition cord corpuscles derived Dioscorides discovered discovery disease duct early England Erasistratus especially Fallopius fever fibres fluid French Galen German gland Greek term heart Herophilus Hippocrates inflammation instrument intestine introduced invented investigated Julius Pollux known larynx later Latin Latin term Latin-a ligament liver maxilla meaning meant medicine membrane ment metal method modern muscle nerve noted observations obtained old term organic Oribasius origin ovum oxygen Paracelsus Paris pathology physician Physiology plant Pliny Professor of Anatomy published referred Riolan Romans Rufus of Ephesus salt Sanskrit scribed skin so-named spelling spinal structure substance suffix suggested surgeon surgery syphilis tion tissue treatise tube tumour urine uterus various veins Vesalius vessels word