See Sentry.
One of a court of about one hundred judges chosen to try civil suits. Under the empire the court was increased to 180, and met usually in four sections.
Of or pertaining to the centumviri, or to a centumvir.
The office of a centumvir, or of the centumviri.
To increase a hundredfold.
To make a hundredfold; to repeat a hundred times.
Of or pertaining to a century; as, a centurial sermon.
To divide into hundreds.
A military officer who commanded a minor division of the Roman army; a captain of a century.
An historian who distinguishes time by centuries, esp. one of those who wrote the /Magdeburg Centuries./ See under Century.
A hundred; as, a century of sonnets; an aggregate of a hundred things.
A freeman of the lowest class; one not a thane or of the servile classes; a churl.
Of the nature of an onion, as in odor; alliaceous.
Feeding upon onions.
Forwards; towards the head or anterior extremity of the body; opposed to caudad.
Relating to, or affected with, headache. A remedy for the headache.
Pain in the head; headache.
Same as Anthodium.
A genus of fossil ganoid fishes found in the old red sandstone or Devonian formation. The head is large, and protected by a broad shield-shaped helmet prolonged behind into two lateral points.
A large division of Mollusca, including all except the bivalves; -- so called because the head is distinctly developed. See Illustration in Appendix.
Having a head.
A medicine for headache, or other disorder in the head.
One of a group of phospholipids (nitrogenous phosphorized fatty substances), present in all living cells and particularly evident in nervous tissue. The cephalins consist of glycerol phosphate in which the two free hydroxyls of the glycerol are esterified with fatty acids, and the phosphate forms an ester linkage to the hydroxyl of ethanolamine. The phosphate may be linked to the alpha (end) or beta (middle) hydroxyl of the glycerol portion. The natural isomers are of the alpha form, and have the general formula R.O.CH2.CHOR/.CH2.O.PO2.O.CH2.CH2.NH2, where R and R/ are the acyl residues of long-chain fatty acids, which may be the same or different.
Form or development of the skull; as, the races of man differ greatly in cephalism.
Same as Phrenitis.
Domination of the head in animal life as expressed in the physical structure; localization of important organs or parts in or near the head, in animal development.
Relating to the long axis of the body.
Shaped like the head.
The science which treats of the head.
One of the somites (arthromeres) which make up the head of arthropods.
An instrument measuring the dimensions of the head of a fetus during delivery.
The measurement of the heads of living persons.
The head.
The cephalata.
The highest class of Mollusca.
One of the Cephalopoda.
Belonging to, or resembling, the cephalopods.
One of the generic names of the gigantic ray (Manta birostris) of the family Mobulidae, known as devilfish, sea devil, manta and manta ray. It is common on the coasts of South Carolina, Florida, and farther south, and is sometimes found as far north as New York Bay. Some of them grow to enormous size, becoming twenty feet of more across the body, and weighing more than a ton.
The anterior region or head of insects and other arthropods.
any of a class of chemical substances, some of which have therapeutically useful antibacterial activity, whose structure contains a beta-lactam ring fused to a six-membered ring containing a sulfur and a nitrogen atom. The first of the series, cephalosporin C, was discovered by G. Brotzu in 1955 in the culture broth of a Cephalosporium species found off the coast of Sardinia. Other cephalosporins have been found to be produced by species of soil bacteria (actinomycetes). Many semisynthetic analogs have been tested for antibacterial effect, and several of them have found use as important clinically useful antibacterial agents, some of which may be taken orally for treatment of bacterial infections. The cephalosporins are the second class of beta-lactam antibiotic to be discovered, the first being the penicillins and more recent classes being the thienamycins and sulfazecins. The cephamycins are a variant of cephalosporins with a methoxyl group on the beta-lactam ring, rendering them more resistant to penicillinases. Among the cephalosporins which have been found clinically useful are cephalexin, cephaloridine, and cephalothin.
The anterior end of the notochord and its bony sheath in the base of cartilaginous crania.
The anterior portion of any one of the Arachnida and higher Crustacea, consisting of the united head and thorax.
An instrument for cutting into the fetal head, to facilitate delivery.
Dissection or opening of the head.
An obstetrical instrument for performing cephalotripsy.
The act or operation of crushing the head of a fetus in the womb in order to effect delivery.
A kind of annelid larva with a circle of cilia around the head.
Having a head; -- applied chiefly to the Cephalata, a division of mollusks.
A northern constellation near the pole. Its head, which is in the Milky Way, is marked by a triangle formed by three stars of the fourth magnitude. See Cassiopeia.
a genus comprising the gillemots.
a conditioned emotional response, an emotional response that has been acquired by conditioning.
Having the texture and color of new wax; like wax; waxy.
Beebread.
Of or pertaining to pottery; relating to the art of making earthenware; as, ceramic products; ceramic ornaments for ceilings.
The art of making things of baked clay; as pottery, tiles, etc.
Native silver chloride, a mineral of a white to pale yellow or gray color, darkening on exposure to the light. It may be cut by a knife, like lead or horn (hence called horn silver).
one of the often brightly colored and branching hornlike structures on the backs of nudibranchs and other related mollusks that serve as gills.
A white amorphous substance, the insoluble part of cherry gum; -- called also meta-arabinic acid.
Pertaining to, or containing, cerasin.
A genus of poisonous African serpents, with a horny scale over each eye; the horned viper.
a genus of weedy plants of the pink family, comprising the mouse-ear chickweeds.
An unctuous preparation for external application, of a consistence intermediate between that of an ointment and a plaster, so that it can be spread upon cloth without the use of heat, but does not melt when applied to the skin.
Covered with wax.
Sophistical.
A group of nudibranchiate Mollusca having on the back papilliform or branched organs serving as gills.
Pertaining to the bone, or cartilage, below the epibranchial in a branchial arch. A ceratobranchial bone, or cartilage.
A genus of ganoid fishes, of the order Dipnoi, first known as Mesozoic fossil fishes; but recently two living species have been discovered in Australian rivers. They have lungs so well developed that they can leave the water and breathe in air. In Australia they are called salmon and baramunda. See Dipnoi, and Archipterygium.
Pertaining to the bone, or cartilage, below the epihyal in the hyoid arch. A ceratohyal bone, or cartilage, which, in man, forms one of the small horns of the hyoid.
a natural family coextensive with the genus Ceratophyllum; the hornworts.
the sole genus constituting the family Ceratophyllaceae; the hornworts.
the type genus of the Ceratopogonidae.
a natural family of insects including the biting midges and sand flies.
a suborder of extinct animals including triceratops.
any of several four-footed herbivorous horned dinosaurs with enormous beaked skulls, of the late Cretaceous in North America and Mongolia.
an extinct family of American ceratopsian dinosaurs.
a genus of water ferns.
the ceratosaurus.
A swift-running bipedal carnivorous American Jurassic dinosaur allied to the European Megalosaurus. The animal was nearly twenty feet in length, and the skull bears a bony short horn between the nostrils on the united nasal bones. See Illustration in Appendix.
An order of sponges in which the skeleton consists of horny fibers. It includes all the commercial sponges.
a small cycad of the genus Ceratozamia having a short scaly woody trunk and fernlike foliage and woody cones; Mexico.
That branch of physics which treats of heat and electricity.
An instrument or apparatus employed in the ancient mysteries to imitate thunder and lightning.
Of or pertaining to, or resembling, Cerberus.
Of or pertaining to the tail.
The larval form of a trematode worm having the shape of a tadpole, with its body terminated by a tail-like appendage.
Of, like, or pertaining to, the Cercari/. One of the Cercari/.
a natural family comprising the froghoppers or spittlebugs.
a natural family of Old World monkeys including the guenon, baboon, colobus monkey, langur, macaque, mandrill, mangabey, patas, and proboscis monkey.
type genus of the Cercopithecidae, consisting of one genus of guenons.
One of the jointed antenniform appendages of the posterior somites of certain insects.
form genus of imperfect fungi that are leaf parasites with long slender spores.
form genus of imperfect fungi lacking pigment in the spores and conidiophores.
See Cercopod.
To wax; to cover or close with wax.
Any grass cultivated for its edible grain, or the grain itself; -- usually in the plural.
Public festivals in honor of Ceres.
A nitrogenous substance closely resembling diastase, obtained from bran, and possessing the power of converting starch into dextrin, sugar, and lactic acid.
The cerebellum.
of or pertaining to the cerebellum; as, the cerebellar artery.
The large lobe of the hind brain in front of and above the medulla; the little brain. It controls combined muscular action. See Brain.
One of a class of lingual consonants in the East Indian languages. See Lingual, n.
The doctrine or theory that psychical phenomena are functions or products of the brain only.
One who accepts cerebralism.
To exhibit mental activity; to have the brain in action.
Action of the brain, whether conscious or unconscious.
Of, pertaining to, or derived from, the brain.
Brain power.
Like the brain in form or substance.
Applied to those nerve fibers which go from the brain to the spinal cord, and so transfer cerebral impulses (centrifugal impressions) outwards.
A nonphosphorized, nitrogenous substance, obtained from brain and nerve tissue by extraction with boiling alcohol. It is uncertain whether it exists as such in nerve tissue, or is a product of the decomposition of some more complex substance.
Applied to those nerve fibers which go from the spinal cord to the brain and so transfer sensations (centripetal impressions) from the exterior inwards.
Inflammation of the cerebrum.
Of or pertaining to the central nervous system consisting of the brain and spinal cord.
Resembling, or analogous to, the cerebrum or brain.
The science which treats of the cerebrum or brain.
A hypochondriacal condition verging upon insanity, occurring in those whose brains have been unduly taxed; -- called also brain fag.
Examination of the brain for the diagnosis of disease; esp., the act or process of diagnosticating the condition of the brain by examination of the interior of the eye (as with an ophthalmoscope).
A sugarlike body obtained by the decomposition of the nitrogenous non-phosphorized principles of the brain.
The anterior, and in man the larger, division of the brain; the seat of the reasoning faculties and the will. See Brain.
A cloth smeared with melted wax, or with some gummy or glutinous matter.
A cerecloth used for the special purpose of enveloping a dead body when embalmed. Any shroud or wrapping for the dead.