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1 belly cavity
Макаров: брюшная полость -
2 belly cavity
Англо-русский словарь по пищевой промышленности > belly cavity
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3 belly cavity splitter
Рыбоводство: распластыватель брюшка (в филетировочной машине) -
4 belly cavity splitter
Англо-русский словарь по пищевой промышленности > belly cavity splitter
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5 belly cavity splitter
Англо-русский сельскохозяйственный словарь > belly cavity splitter
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6 belly
1. n живот, брюхо, пузоwooden belly — "доскообразный живот "
2. n сл. брюхо, желудок3. n аппетит4. n анат. брюшко5. n первый желудок6. n книжн. чрево, утроба7. n уст. чрево матери8. n геол. утолщение пласта9. n геол. колоколообразное включение минерала в жиле10. n геол. верхняя дека; дека11. n геол. мор. пузо12. v надуваться, пучиться; вспучиваться; раздуватьсяbelly out — надуваться, наполняться ветром
13. v наполняться ветром14. v надувать, раздуватьСинонимический ряд:1. abdomen (noun) abdomen; gut; intestinal cavity; paunch; stomach; tummy; underbelly; venter; ventral surface; vitals2. depths (noun) depths; interior; recesses3. project (verb) bag; bulge; jut; overhang; pout; project; protrude; stand out; stick out4. swell (verb) balloon; bulge out; curve out; fill; spread; swell; unfold -
7 распластыватель брюшка
Русско-английский словарь по пищевой промышленности > распластыватель брюшка
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8 брюшная полость
1) General subject: abdominal cavity, the abdominal region2) Biology: peritoneal cavity3) Medicine: abdominal space, abdominal teeth, alvus, enterocele, venter4) Anatomy: abdomen, cavitas abdominalis (пространство, расположенное в туловище ниже диафрагмы и целиком заполненное брюшными органами; подразделяется на собственно брюшную полость и полость таза), cavum abdominis (пространство, расположенное в туловище ниже диафрагмы и целиком заполненное брюшными органами; подразделяется на собственно брюшную полость и полость таза)5) Immunology: peritoneum6) Aviation medicine: body cavity7) Makarov: belly cavity, stomach cavity -
9 कुक्षि
kukshím. <f. L. > the belly, cavity of the abdomen (in the earlier language generally used in du. RV. VS. AV.);
the interior of anything W. ;
the womb R. Ragh. X, 60 etc.. ;
a cavity in general (e.g.. adri-kukshi, cavity of a mountain Ragh. II, 38) MBh. III, 10694 etc.. ;
a valley Kathās. LXV, 214 ;
(with sāgara orᅠ samudra) an ocean-cavity i.e. a bay, gulf MBh. Pañcat. ;
the sheath of a sword L. ;
steel L. ;
N. of a son of Priya-vrata andᅠ Kāmyā Hariv. 59 ;
of Bali Hariv. 191 ;
of a king MBh. I, 2692 ;
of a son of Ikshvāku andᅠ father of Vikukshi R. ;
of a teacher BhP. ;
of a region gaṇa dhūmâ̱di, (is) f. N. of a daughter of Priyavrata andᅠ Kāmyā VP. ;
+ cf. Lat. coxa, coxendix;
Gk. κοχώνη;
Old Germ. bûh;
Mod. Germ. Bauch
- कुक्षिगत
- कुक्षिज
- कुक्षिभेद
- कुक्षिम्भरि
- कुक्षिरन्ध्र
- कुक्षिरन्ध्रक
- कुक्षिशूल
- कुक्ष्यामय
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10 распластыватель брюшка
Универсальный русско-английский словарь > распластыватель брюшка
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11 جوف
n.abdomen / belly / cavity / hollow / niche / vacancy / vacuity / vacuum -
12 तुन्दकूपिका
tunda-kūpikā
tunda-kūpīf. « belly-cavity», the navel L.
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13 तुन्दकूपी
tunda-kūpikā
tunda-kūpīf. « belly-cavity», the navel L.
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14 κοῖλος
Grammatical information: adj.Meaning: `hollow, hollowed out, spacious, deep' (Il.).Other forms: κόϊλος, s. belowCompounds: Often as 1. member, e. g. κοιλο-γάστωρ `with a hollow belly, greedy' (A.; on the formation Sommer Nominalkomp. 150).Derivatives: A. Substant.: 1. κοιλία f. `abdomen, belly, hollow of the body in gen.' (IA.) with κοιλιώδης `belly-like' (Arist.), κοιλιακός `blonging to the belly, suffer from diseases of the belly' (Plu., medic.), κοιλιτική ( νόσος) `disease of the belly' ( Cat. Cod. Astr.); diminut. κοιλίδιον (Str.). 2. κοιλάς f. `hollow, ravine' (hell.), adj. f. `hollow' (Tryph. Ep.). 3. κοιλότης `hollow' (Arist.). 4. κοιλίσκος m. `hollow, scoop-shaped knife' (medic.; cf. γραφίσκος and other names of instruments in Chantraine Formation 408). 5. and 6. κοίλωμα (Arist., hell.), κοίλωσις (Hp.) `hollowing, deepening', cf. κοιλόομαι below. - B. Adjectives (to τὸ κοῖλον `hollow, cavity'): 1. κοιλώδης `rich in cavities' (Babr.). 2. κοιλαῖος = κοῖλος (Gal.). - C. Verbs: 1. κοιλαίνω, κοιλᾶναι (- ῆναι), κεκοίλασμαι `hollow out' (IA.) with κοίλανσις (Alex. Aphr.), κοίλασμα (LXX, Hero), κοιλασία (Hero), 2. κοιλόομαι, only in κεκοιλωμένος `hollowed' (D. S., Dsc.); κοίλωμα, κοίλωσις, if not directly from κοῖλος, s. above.Origin: IE [Indo-European]X [probably] [592] *ḱeu(H)-? `hollow, deep' ??Etymology: From the sometimes threesyllabic κόϊλος (in Hom. always possible except χ 385, at verse-beginning; Meister HK 50, Chantraine Gramm. hom. 1, 28) follows a basis *κόϜιλος, which can be connected as λ-deriv. with κόοι τὰ χάσματα τῆς γῆς, καὶ τὰ κοιλώματα H. and Lat. cavus `hollow' from *kou̯os; beside it MIr. cūa `hollow' \< *ḱou̯-ios. If the connection κοῖλος = Alb. thelë `deep' (\< IE *ḱou̯ilos) is correct (Pedersen KZ 36, 332), the formation is older than Greek. Cognate l-derivv. are Arm. soyl `cavity' (\< IE. *ḱeu-lo-) and κύλα; s. v. More on the formation Benveniste Origines 41f., where a noun in -il is supposed as basis, and Specht Ursprung 130, who starts from an i-stem, referring to the hapax κοιφόν κοῖλον (prob. for κυφόν). - S. also κῶος, κώθων, κύαρ; further W.-Hofmann s. cavus.Page in Frisk: 1,891-892Greek-English etymological dictionary (Ελληνικά-Αγγλικά ετυμολογική λεξικό) > κοῖλος
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15 उदरम् _udaram
उदरम् [उद्-ऋ-अप्]1 The belly; दुष्पूरोदरपूरणाय Bh. 2.119; cf. कृशोदरी, उदरभरणम्, उदरंभरि &c.-2 The interior or inside of anything, cavity; तडाग˚ Pt.2.15; R.5.7; U.2.16,4.29; त्वां कारयामि कमलोदरबन्धनस्थम् Ś.6.2; Śānti.1.5; Ś.1.19; Amaru.88; जलदोदरेभ्यः Mk.5; Rs.3.12; घनानां वारिगर्भोदराणाम् Ś.7.7.-3 Enlargement of the abdomen from dropsy or flatulence; तस्य होदरं जज्ञे Ait. Br.-4 Any morbid abdominal affection, such as liver, spleen &c. (said to be of 8 kinds वात˚, पित्त˚, कफ˚, त्रिलिङ्ग˚ or दूषी˚, प्लीहा˚, बद्धगुद˚, आगन्तुक˚ and जल˚).-5 Slaughter [cf. L. uterus; Zend. udara].-6 Battle.-Comp. -अग्निः The digestive faculty.-आध्मानः flatu- lence of the belly.-आमयः disease of the belly, dysentery, diarrhœa.-आमयिन् a. suffering from dysentery.-आवर्तः the navel.-आवेष्टः the tape-worm.-ग्रन्थिः, -गुल्मः disease of the spleen.-त्राणम् 1 a cuirass, armour covering the front of the body.-2 a belly- band.-पिशाच a. [उदरे तत्पूर्तौ पिशाच इव] gluttonous, voracious (having a devilish appetite). (-चः) a glutton.-पूरम् ind. till the belly is full; P.III.4.31. उदरपूरं भुङ्क्ते Sk. eats his fill.-पोषणम्, -भरणम् feeding the belly, support of life (cf. उदरंभरि).-शय a. अधिकरणे शेतेः P.III.2.15; sleeping on the face or the belly. (-यः) fœtus.-सर्वस्वः a glutton, an epicure (one to whom the belly is all-in-all -
16 specus
spĕcus, ūs ( abl. plur. specibus, Sen. Cons. ap. Front. Aquaed. 125; on the various forms found only in the grammarians, v. Neue, Formenl. 1, 569 sq.), m. (f. and n. v. infra) [perh. root spec-; v. specio, and so orig. a hole, aperture; but cf. speos].I.Lit., a cave, cavern, grot, den; a cavity, chasm, natural or artificial; of the latter kind, a ditch, drain, canal, channel, covered water-course, a pit in mines, etc. (cf. spelunca).(α).Masc. (class. and freq.): inferum vastos specus, Enn. ap. Non. 222, 32 (Trag. v. 218 Vahl.):(β).specus tenebricosus,
Varr. ib. 222, 31:fons ex opaco specu,
Liv. 1, 21; so abl. sing., id. 1, 56, 10; 10, 10, 1:forum medium ferme specu vasto collapsum dicitur,
id. 7, 6; so sing., Ov. M. 3, 29; 7, 409; 11, 235; id. F. 4, 495; Liv. 10, 1, 5; Tac. A. 16, 1, 3; 16, 4, 59.— Plur.:quos agor in specus?
Hor. C. 3, 25, 2: paucos specus in extremo fundo, et eos quidem subterraneos, * Cic. Att. 15, 26, 4; so of drains, ditches, Varr. R. R. 3, 17 fin.; Cat. 61, 28; Liv. 39, 13, 13; Tac. A. 12, 57; id. G. 16; Sen. Med. 741 al.—Fem. (ante- and post-class.): concava specus, Enn. ap. Non. 222, 23 (Ann. v. 420 Vahl.); cf. Serv. Verg. A. 7, 568; Pac. ap. Non. 223, 2 Müll. (Trag. p. 91 Rib.); id. ap. Fest. p. 343 Müll. (l. l. p. 73 Rib.):(γ).specum quandam nactus remotam latebrosamque, in eam me penetro et recondo,
Gell. 5, 14, 18; Sil. 6, 276.—Neutr. (anteclass. and poet.):(δ).hic specus horrendum,
Verg. A. 7, 568;Serv. ad loc.: invisum caelo specus,
Sil. 13, 425; Ps.-Quint. Decl. 10, 19.—Acc. to the second declension: speca apposita, Cato ap. Prisc. p. 713 P.: altis claudere specis, Att. ap. Non. 487, 25 (Fragm. Trag. v. 63 Rib.).—II. -
17 कुक्षिः _kukṣiḥ
कुक्षिः 1 The belly (in general); जिह्मिताध्मातकुक्षिः (भुजगपतिः) Mk.9.12.-2 The womb, the part of the belly containing the foetus; कुम्भीनस्याश्च कुक्षिजः R.15.15; Śi.13.4.-3 The interior of anything; विभक्तात्मा विभु- स्तासामेकः कुक्षिष्वनेकधा R.1.65 (where the word is used in sense 2 also.)-4 A cavity in general.-5 A cavern, cave; अद्रिकुक्षौ हैमवताच्च कुक्षेः R.2.38,67; a valley; अस्तीह हिमवत्कुक्षौ देशः पृथ्वीशिरोमणिः Ks.65.214.-6 The sheath of a sword.-7 N. of Bali.-8 A bay, gulf.-Comp. -गत a. being in the belly; कुक्षिगतीकृता इव N.2.83.-जः a. son; स च प्राप मधूपघ्नं कुम्भीनस्याश्च कुक्षिजः R.15.15.-शूलः belly-ache, colic. -
18 κοιλία
A cavity of the body, i.e. thorax with abdomen, Hp.Art.46 (including ἡ ἄνω κ., = thorax, ἡ κάτω, = abdomen, acc. to Gal.15.896); τὰ κατὰ κ. νουσήματα diseases of the thoracic cavity, Hp.Aff.6.2 belly, abdomen, Hdt.2.87, IG42(1).122.32 (Epid.), etc.: specified asἡ κάτω κ. Ar.Ra. 485
, Hp.Ulc.3, Pl.Ti. 73a, 85e, Arist.Somn.Vig. 456a3, PA 650a13, etc.; opp. ἡ ἄνω κ., stomach, Pl.Ti. 85e, Arist.PAl.c.; κ. alone freq. = stomach, Id.HA 489a2, etc.; of birds, Id.PA 674b22; also, paunch or rumen of animals, Id.HA 507b5: hence, of gluttons,δουλεύειν τῇ ἑαυτῶν κ. Ep.Rom.16.18
, cf. Ep.Phil.3.19.3 intestines,κ. κείνη Hdt.2.40
, cf. 86,92, etc.; of animals, κ. ὑεία pig's tripe, Ar.Eq. 356;κοιλίας ἥμισυ SIG1025.51
(Cos, iv/iii B.C.): pl., tripe and puddings, Ar.Eq. 160, Pl. 1169.b phrases, κ. σκληρὰν ἔχειν to be costive, Theopomp.Com.62.2;κατὰ κοιλίαν νοσεῖν Com.Adesp.730
; τὴν κ. λύειν to relax the bowels, Arist. Pr. 863b29, 864b14; αἱ κ. λύονται, ἀναλύονται, ib. 947b13, GA 728a15; εὔλυτοί [εἰσι] Id.Pr. 876b31;ἐὰν ἡ κ. στῇ Id.HA 588a7
;κ. καταρραγεῖσα Hp.Coac. 126
; [οἶνος] κοιλίας μαλακτικός, κοιλίας ἐφεκτικά, Mnesith. ap.Ath.1.33b, 2.59c; κ. ἐκλύειν, ὑπάγειν, μαλάσσειν, Dsc.2.72, 163, 171;κ. ῥέουσαι D.S.5.41
.4 excrement, esp.in pl., κ. συνεστηκυῖαι excrements of firm consistency, Hp.Aër.10; opp.κ. ἐφυγραινόμεναι Id.Epid.1.10
;κ. ὑγρή Id.Prorrh.1.38
; στερεή, σκληρή, Id.Acut.(Sp.) 56, Epid.4.23; οὔρησις καὶ κ. ἀχρόως ibid.II any cavity in the body, ventricle, chamber, as in the lungs, heart, liver, brain,κ. αἱ τὸ πνεῦμα δεχόμεναι καὶ προπέμπουσαι Id.Art.41
;ἡ δὲ καρδία ἔχει μὲν τρεῖς κ. Arist.HA 496a4
, cf. 513a27.3 supposed cavities inside the muscles, Erasistr. ap. Gal.4.375, 707, Antyll. ap.Orib.8.6.30, 7.9.4; cf. νηδύς.III any hollow or cavity, in the earth, Arist.Mete. 349b4, 350b23, al.; in the clouds, ib. 369b2, al.IV perh.finger- tip, Aret. SD1.8 (pl.). -
19 κοιλία
κοιλία, ας, ἡ (κοῖλος ‘hollow’; Hdt., Aristoph.+; loanw. in rabb.) in its broadest sense the ‘cavity’ of the body (Gen 3:14 w. στῆθος) that stores such organs as the stomach, intestines, and womb, then in ref. to such parts.ⓐ the digestive tract in its fullest extent, belly, stomach (Jer 28:34; Ezk 3:3; Sir 36:18 al.) εἰς τὴν κ. χωρεῖν (cp. Plut., Mor. 699f εἴπερ εἰς κοιλίαν ἐχώρει διὰ στομάχου πᾶν τὸ πινόμενον. Even the last part of the alimentary canal is κ.: Herodian 1, 17, 10) Mt 15:17; cp. Mk 7:19.ⓑ esp., the body’s receptacle for aliments, belly, stomach (so Diod S 2, 58, 3 between φάρυγξ [gullet] and σπλάγχνα [intestines]; Aelian, VH 1, 1 al.) of Jonah’s fish (Jon 2:1f; Just., D. 107, 2) Mt 12:40. Of the human stomach 1 Cor 6:13. γεμίσαι τὴν κ. ἔκ τινος fill the stomach w. someth. i.e. eat one’s fill of someth. Lk 15:16 v.l. Of the working of a scroll eaten by the writer of the Apc. (cp. Ezk 3:3) πικρανεῖ σου τὴν κ. Rv 10:9; cp. vs. 10; δουλεύειν τῇ κ. be a slave to one’s stomach Ro 16:18; ὧν ὁ θεὸς ἡ κ. whose god is their stomach Phil 3:19.② womb, uterus (Epict. 2, 16, 43; 3, 22, 74; Dt 28:4, 11; Job 1:21; Ruth 1:11; TestJob 24:2) Lk 1:41, 44; 2:21; 11:27; 23:29; J 3:4; B 13:2 (Gen 25:23). ἐκ κοιλίας from birth i.e. from earliest youth (Judg 16:17 A; Is 49:1) Mt 19:12; Lk 1:15; Ac 3:2; 14:8; Gal 1:15; καρπὸς τῆς κ. fruit of the womb (cp. Mi 6:7; La 2:20) Lk 1:42.③ seat of inward life, of feelings and desires, belly (but Eng. prefers the functional equivalent heart): κ. denotes the hidden, innermost recesses of the human body (=טֶןבֶּ Job 15:35; Pr 18:20; 20:27, 30; Sir 19:12; 51:21), so that a variation betw. κοιλία and καρδία becomes poss.: Ac 2:30 v.l. (κοιλία and καρδία for ὀσφῦς); Rv 10:9 (v.l. καρδία) (Hab 3:16; Ps 39:9; cp. schol. on Nicander, Alexipharmaca 21 τοῦ στόματος τῆς κοιλίας, ἣν οἱ μὲν καρδίαν καλοῦσιν, οἱ δὲ δοχεῖον τῶν ἐντέρων τῆς βρώσεως [καρδία of the upper opening of the stomach: Theocr. 2, 49]; PGM 4, 3141: the κοιλία is the place where the καρδία is found). ποταμοὶ ἐκ τῆς κ. αὐτοῦ ῥεύσουσιν ὕδατος ζῶντος rivers of living water shall flow from the person’s heart J 7:38 (thought of as a scripture quot., though its source can no longer be determined w. certainty. The expr. may be proverbial; cp. Cicero, De Orat. 2, 39 [162]. The κ. has often been taken to be that of the believer, but there is an increasing tendency to punctuate w. a period after ἐμέ in vs. 38 rather than after πινέτω at the end of vs. 37 [s. RSV mg. and NRSV text] and understand κ. of Jesus; s. Hdb. ad loc.; JJeremias, Golgotha 1926, 80–84; HBornhäuser, Sukka ’35, 34–39; Bultmann, Ev. d. Joh. ’41, 228–30. For patristic interpr., HRahner, Biblica 22, ’41, 269–302; 367–403. Differently, A-MDubarle, Vivre et Penser 3, ’43/44, 238–41). JBlenkinsopp, NTS 6, ’59, 95–99.—B. 253. DELG s.v. κοῖλος. M-M. TW. -
20 karın
",-rnı 1. abdomen; abdominal region. 2. belly, stomach. 3. womb. 4. belly; the rounded, protrusive part (of something). 5. colloq. mind, head. 6. phys. antinode, loop. -ı acıkmak to be hungry, get hungry. -ı aç hungry. -ı ağrımak to have a stomach ache. - ağrısı 1. stomach ache, colic. 2. colloq. a pain in the neck (person). 3. colloq. what-do-you-call-it, whatyoumayjigger. - boşluğu anat. abdominal cavity. -ı burnunda very much in the family way, big with child. -ını deşmek /ın/ colloq. to stab (someone) in the belly. -ı doymak to be full, have eaten one´s fill. -ını doyurmak 1. to eat one´s fill. 2. /ın/ to feed (someone). - fıtığı path. abdominal hernia. -ı geniş easygoing, nonchalant. -ı gitmek to have diarrhea. -ı karnına geçmiş painfully thin person. -ından konuşan kimse ventriloquist. -ından konuşma ventriloquism. -ından konuşmak to ventriloquize. -ından söylemek 1. to speak very softly. 2. to make up a tale, make up a yarn. -ı sürmek to have diarrhea. -ı tok not hungry, full. -ım tok (bu sözlere). colloq. I´m tired of hearing about it. -ı tok, sırtı pek well-off and contented with life. - üstüne iniş crash landing (made without using the landing gear). - yüzgeci ventral fin. -ı zil/dümbelek çalmak for (one´s) stomach to growl from hunger; (for someone) to be very hungry."
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См. также в других словарях:
Belly — Bel ly (b[e^]l l[y^]), n.; pl. {Bellies} ( l[i^]z). [OE. bali, bely, AS. belg, b[ae]lg, b[ae]lig, bag, bellows, belly; akin to Icel. belgr bag, bellows, Sw. b[ a]lg, Dan. b[ae]lg, D. & G. balg, cf. W. bol the paunch or belly, dim. boly, Ir. bolg … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Belly doublet — Belly Bel ly (b[e^]l l[y^]), n.; pl. {Bellies} ( l[i^]z). [OE. bali, bely, AS. belg, b[ae]lg, b[ae]lig, bag, bellows, belly; akin to Icel. belgr bag, bellows, Sw. b[ a]lg, Dan. b[ae]lg, D. & G. balg, cf. W. bol the paunch or belly, dim. boly, Ir … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Belly fretting — Belly Bel ly (b[e^]l l[y^]), n.; pl. {Bellies} ( l[i^]z). [OE. bali, bely, AS. belg, b[ae]lg, b[ae]lig, bag, bellows, belly; akin to Icel. belgr bag, bellows, Sw. b[ a]lg, Dan. b[ae]lg, D. & G. balg, cf. W. bol the paunch or belly, dim. boly, Ir … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Belly timber — Belly Bel ly (b[e^]l l[y^]), n.; pl. {Bellies} ( l[i^]z). [OE. bali, bely, AS. belg, b[ae]lg, b[ae]lig, bag, bellows, belly; akin to Icel. belgr bag, bellows, Sw. b[ a]lg, Dan. b[ae]lg, D. & G. balg, cf. W. bol the paunch or belly, dim. boly, Ir … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Belly worm — Belly Bel ly (b[e^]l l[y^]), n.; pl. {Bellies} ( l[i^]z). [OE. bali, bely, AS. belg, b[ae]lg, b[ae]lig, bag, bellows, belly; akin to Icel. belgr bag, bellows, Sw. b[ a]lg, Dan. b[ae]lg, D. & G. balg, cf. W. bol the paunch or belly, dim. boly, Ir … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
belly — [bel′ē] n. pl. bellies [ME beli < OE belg, leather bag, purse, bellows < IE base * bhelĝh , to swell, bag (< * bhel , to inflate) > Ir bolg, sack, belly, ON bylgja, billow, Goth balgs, leather bottle] 1. the lower front part of the… … English World dictionary
belly — n 1. abdomen, stomach, Inf. tummy, gut, Sl. breadbasket, Scot, and North Eng. wame; paunch, potbelly, Inf. bay window, Inf. corporation, Sl. pot, Sl. beer belly, Sl. spare tire, Obs. gorbelly; colonic cavity, intestinal cavity, visceral cavity,… … A Note on the Style of the synonym finder
Belly — That part of the body that contains all of the structures between the chest and the pelvis. Also called the abdomen. The belly (or abdomen) is separated anatomically from the chest by the diaphragm, the powerful muscle spanning the body cavity… … Medical dictionary
belly — n. & v. n. (pl. ies) 1 the part of the human body below the chest, containing the stomach and bowels. 2 the stomach, esp. representing the body s need for food. 3 the front of the body from the waist to the groin. 4 the underside of a four legged … Useful english dictionary
belly — I. noun (plural bellies) Etymology: Middle English bely bellows, belly, from Old English belg bag, skin; akin to Old High German balg bag, skin, Old English blāwan to blow more at blow Date: before 12th century 1. a. abdomen 1; also potbelly 1 … New Collegiate Dictionary
belly — n. 1) the abdomen or abdominal cavity. 2) the central fleshy portion of a muscle … The new mediacal dictionary