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1 darm
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2 colitis
n. colitis, inflammation of the colon (portion of the large intestine) -
3 colon
n. part of the large intestine between the cecum and rectum (in humans); part of the digestive tract between the stomach and rectum (in animals) -
4 darm
adj. intestinal, pertaining to the intestines--------n. intestine, one of two canals in the lower abdomen in which food is digested; gut -
5 dubbelepunt
n. colon, punctuation mark composed of two vertically aligned dots; part of the large intestine between the cecum and rectum (in humans); part of the digestive tract between the stomach and rectum (in animals) -
6 duodenaal
adj. duodenal, pertaining to the duodenum (part of the small intestine) -
7 endeldarm
n. rectum, last section of the large intestine which ends at the anus -
8 kronkeldarm
n. ileum, third and lowest section of the small intestine (Anatomy) -
9 de dikke darm
de dikke darm -
10 dik
dik1〈 het〉1 [bezinksel] grounds, dregs2 [dik gedeelte] thick♦voorbeelden:iemand door dik en dun volgen • support someone/stand by someone through thick and thin/fair and foul————————dik24 [opgezet, gezwollen] swollen♦voorbeelden:1 een dik boek • a thick/fat book10 cm dik • 10 cm thickde dikke darm • the large intestineze stonden tien rijen dik • they stood ten (rows) deepeen dikke streep/lijn • a thick/bold stroke/lineeen dikke trui • a thick jumperdik worden • thicken, set, congealdie jurk maakt dik • that dress makes you look fatdik worden • grow fatzij heeft aanleg om dik te worden • she puts on weight easilydik worden • swell (up)¶ dik doen • swank, swagger, boastzich dik maken (over iets) • get worked up (about something)II 〈 bijvoeglijk naamwoord, bijwoord〉♦voorbeelden:een dikke voldoende • a (very) high markdik tevreden (zijn) • (be) well-satisfieddik verdiend • well-earnedhij is dik in de zeventig • he is well into his seventiesdik onder het stof • thick with dustdat komt dik voor elkaar/mekaar • that'll work out finehet er dik bovenop leggen • lay it on thickhet ligt er dik bovenop • it is quite obviousdat zit er dik in • I wouldn't be surpriseddik in iets zitten • have plenty of somethingdikke vrienden zijn • be great/close friendseen dikke mist • thick fog -
11 dun
♦voorbeelden:een dun laagje beschaving • a thin varnish/veneer of civilizationeen dun laagje ijs • a glaze of iceeen dun straaltje water • a (thin) trickle of waterde lucht werd dunner • the air became rarerdunner (en dunner) worden/maken • become/make thinner (and thinner); 〈 slijten〉 wear thin; 〈 sterk afnemen〉 become emaciated4 dunne ontlasting hebben • have a watery/soft stooleen dunne stem • 〈 figuurlijk〉 a thin/small voicehet dunne van het brouwsel wordt weggegoten • the liquid of the mixture is poured offII 〈 bijwoord〉2 [in dunne/vloeibare toestand] thinly♦voorbeelden:zich te dun kleden • dress too lightly -
12 dunne darm
dunne darm -
13 dunne/dikke darm
dunne/dikke darmsmall/large intestineVan Dale Handwoordenboek Nederlands-Engels > dunne/dikke darm
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14 kattendarm
См. также в других словарях:
Intestine — In*tes tine, a. [L. intestinus, fr. intus on the inside, within, fr. in in: cf. F. intestine. See {In}.] [1913 Webster] 1. Internal; inward; opposed to {external}. [1913 Webster] Epilepsies, fierce catarrhs, Intestine stone and ulcers. Milton.… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Intestine — In*tes tine, n.; pl. {Intestines}. [L. intestinum: cf. F. intestin. See {Intestine}, a.] [1913 Webster] 1. (Anat.) That part of the alimentary canal between the stomach and the anus. See Illust. of Digestive apparatus. [1913 Webster] 2. pl. The… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
intestine — [in tes′tən] adj. [L intestinus, inward, internal < intus, within, akin to Gr entos < IE * entos < base * en, in] internal, with regard to a country or community; domestic; civil n. [L intestinum, neut. sing. of intestinus] [usually pl.] … English World dictionary
intestine — (n.) early 15c., from M.Fr. intestin (14c.) or directly from L. intestinum a gut, in plural, intestines, bowels, noun use of neuter of adjective intestinus “inward, internal” (see INTESTINES (Cf. intestines)). Distinction of large and small… … Etymology dictionary
intestine — internal, *inner, interior, inside Antonyms: foreign Contrasted words: external, *outer, exterior, outside, outward: extraneous, alien, *extrinsic … New Dictionary of Synonyms
intestine — (also intestines) ► NOUN ▪ the lower part of the alimentary canal from the end of the stomach to the anus. DERIVATIVES intestinal adjective. ORIGIN Latin intestinum, from intus within … English terms dictionary
Intestine — In anatomy, the intestine is the segment of the alimentary canal extending from the stomach to the anus and, in humans and other mammals, consists of two segments, the small intestine and the large intestine. In humans, the small intestine is… … Wikipedia
intestine — The digestive tube passing from the stomach to the anus. It is divided primarily into the intestinum tenue (small i.) and the intestinum crassum (large i.). SYN: bowel, gut (1), intestinum (1). [L. intestinum] large i. [TA] the portion of the… … Medical dictionary
intestine — /in tes tin/, n. 1. Usually, intestines. the lower part of the alimentary canal, extending from the pylorus to the anus. 2. Also called small intestine. the narrow, longer part of the intestines, comprising the duodenum, jejunum, and ileum, that… … Universalium
intestine — bowel; = gut; n. the part of the alimentary canal that extends from the stomach to the anus. It is divided into two main parts – the small intestine and the large intestine. The small intestine is divided into the duodenum, jejunum, and ileum. It … The new mediacal dictionary
intestine — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ large, small ▪ lower, upper PREPOSITION ▪ along the intestine, in the … Collocations dictionary