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1 procidentia
1.prōcĭdentĭa, ĭum, n., v. 1. procido fin.2.prōcĭdentĭa, ae, f. [1. procido], a falling down or forwards of a part of the body out of its place, a procidence, prolapse:II.ani,
Cels. 6, 6, 8 fin.:vulvarum,
Plin. 23, 9, 81, § 161:sedis,
id. 26, 8, 58, § 90; cf. procido, P. a.—Gram. t. t. = antiptôsis, the substitution of one case for another, Prisc. 1099 P. -
2 procido
1.prō-cĭdo, ĭdi, 3, v. n. [cado], to fall forwards or down, to fall flat, fall prostrate (perh. not ante-Aug.).I.In gen.:II.ad pedes alicujus,
Hor. Epod. 17, 13:praeceps procidit ante proram,
Liv. 26, 39:universi prociderunt,
id. 45, 25:in corpus amici,
Stat. Th. 9, 47:cum tu lassata sequendo Procidis,
Ov. M. 9, 649:impulsa cupressus Euro Procidit late,
Hor. C. 4, 6, 10:muri pars prociderat,
Liv. 31, 46 fin. —In partic., of a part of the body, to fall down or forwards out of its place:2.oculi procidunt,
Cels. 6, 6, 8 fin.:oculi procidentes,
Plin. 24, 13, 73, § 118:si procidant vulvae,
id. 23, 6, 54, § 103:pastilli ex acaciā sistunt vulvam et sedem procidentes,
id. 24, 12, 67, § 110.—Hence, prōcĭdentĭa, ĭum, P. a., n. plur., parts of the body that [p. 1452] fall out of their place, Plin. 23, 1, 27, § 56; 24, 11, 59, § 99.procīdo, no perf., īsum, 3, v. a. [pro-caedo], to strike down, Not. Tir. p. 18:procisus, praecisus,
id. ib.
См. также в других словарях:
Procidentia — Procidence Proc i*dence, Procidentia Proc*i*den ti*a,, n. [L. procidentia, fr. procidens, p. pr. of procidere to fall down forward.] (Med.) A falling down; a prolapsus. [R.] Parr. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
procidentia — A sinking down or prolapse of any organ or part; usually related to prolapse of the uterus. [L. a falling forward, fr. procido, to fall forward] p. uteri prolapse of the uterus. * * * pro·ci·den·tia .prō sə den ch(ē )ə, .prä n PROLAPSE … Medical dictionary
procidentia — n. the complete downward displacement (prolapse) of an organ, especially the uterus (uterine procidentia), which protrudes from the vaginal opening. Uterine procidentia may result from injury to the floor of the pelvic cavity, invariably the… … The new mediacal dictionary
procidentia — ˌprōsəˈdench(ē)ə, ˌpräs noun ( s) Etymology: Latin, from procident , procidens (present participle of procidere to fall forward, fall down, from pro forward, down + cidere, from cadere to fall) + ia y more at pro , chance … Useful english dictionary
procidentia — proci·den·tia … English syllables
Выпадение (Procidentia) — значительное смещение вниз какого либо органа, вплоть до его выпадения (пролапса); особенно часто данный термин применяется по отношению к матке (выпадение матки (uterine procidentia)), которая видна в наружном отверстии влагалища. Выпадение… … Медицинские термины
ВЫПАДЕНИЕ — (procidentia) значительное смещение вниз какого либо органа, вплоть до его выпадения (пролапса); особенно часто данный термин применяется по отношению к матке (выпадение матки (uterine procidentia)), которая видна в наружном отверстии влагалища.… … Толковый словарь по медицине
prolapse — 1. To sink down, said of an organ or other part. 2. A sinking of an organ or other part, especially its appearance at a natural or artificial orifice. SEE ALSO: procidentia, ptosis. [L. prolapsus, a falling] p. of the corpus luteum ectropion of… … Medical dictionary
procidence — [ prɔsidɑ̃s ] n. f. • 1560; lat. procidentia « chute d un organe », de procidere « tomber en avant » ♦ Anat. Prolapsus d un organe ou d une partie anatomique. Procidence du cordon ombilical. ● procidence nom féminin (latin procidentia, de… … Encyclopédie Universelle
Procidence — Proc i*dence, Procidentia Proc*i*den ti*a,, n. [L. procidentia, fr. procidens, p. pr. of procidere to fall down forward.] (Med.) A falling down; a prolapsus. [R.] Parr. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Gottfried Welsch — (* 12. November 1618 in Leipzig; † 5. September 1690 ebenda) war ein deutscher Mediziner, der als einer der Begründer der Rechtsmedizin in Deutschland gilt. Welsch war Dekan der medizinischen Fakultät und Rektor der Universität Leipzig … Deutsch Wikipedia