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diverticulum. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
diverticulum, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
diverticulum in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
diverticulum you have here. The definition of the word
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English
Etymology
From Latin dīverticulum, alternative form of dēverticulum (“byroad; deviation”), from dēvertō (“turn away, turn aside”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˌdɑɪ.vɜːˈtɪ.kjə.ləm/
Noun
diverticulum (plural diverticulums or diverticula)
- (anatomy) A small out-pouching of an organ wall such as the large intestine or urinary bladder.
2015, Giulia Enders, translated by David Shaw, Gut, Scribe, published 2016, page 16:Diverticula are small, light-bulb-shaped pouches in the bowel wall, resulting from the tissue in the gut bulging outwards under pressure.
Derived terms
Translations
small growth off an organ
Latin
Etymology
From dēvertō (“to turn away”) + -i- + -culum (suffix for instrumental and diminutive nouns).
Pronunciation
Noun
dīverticulum n (genitive dīverticulī); second declension
- Alternative form of dēverticulum ("byroad").
- (anatomy, New Latin, exclusively as diverticulum) A small growth off an organ of a body; diverticulum.
- 1829, University of Groningen, Annales Academiae groninganae, Commentatio de diverticulus intestinorum, page 69:
Baillie exemplum praebuit diverticuli coniuncti cum vitiis a niſu formativo abnormi productis: illuc ſc. invenit in foetu, cui aderat omnium thoracis et abdominis viscerum ſitus inverſus, una cum partitione lienis in quinque lobos, uti in Cetaceis ſolet.- Baillie provided an example of a diverticulum connected with defects extended by an abnormal formative impulse. To that point naturally it is found in a foetus, to whom an inverted position of all the internal organs of the abdomen and thorax is present, together with a separation of the spleen into five lobes, as is usual in cetaceans.
Declension
Second-declension noun (neuter).
References