different between fasciculi vs fascicule

fasciculi

English

Noun

fasciculi

  1. plural of fasciculus

Latin

Noun

fascicul?

  1. nominative plural of fasciculus
  2. genitive singular of fasciculus
  3. vocative plural of fasciculus

fasciculi From the web:

  • what does fascicle mean
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  • fasciculus gracilis and cuneatus
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  • what does the fasciculi do
  • what is muscle fascicle
  • what is the fasciculi proprii


fascicule

English

Etymology

From French fascicule, from Latin fasciculus.

Noun

fascicule (plural fascicules)

  1. An installment of a printed work, a fascicle.
    • 1974, Lawrence Durrell, Monsieur, Faber & Faber 1992, p. 104:
      In Piers' hotel room at Avignon there was a ton of these fascicules, some of which I could even remember having heard him deliver in those far-off days.
  2. (obsolete) A bundle of nerve fibers; a fasciculus.
    • 1893, Charles Zimmerman, "The Relation of the Ocular Nerves to the Brain", The Medical and Surgical Reporter, page 812, Nov. 25, 1893.
      Perlia advocates, however, the assumption that the posterior longitudinal fascicule connecting the oculo-motor center with the medulla oblongata, []
    • 1895, Charles E. Sajous, "Normal Histology and Microscopical Technology", Annual of the Universal Medical Sciences, page 97
      In the large tactile hairs, or sinus hairs, — i.e., those provided with a blood-sinus, — several nerve-fibres form a fascicule and enter the follicle near the base; []
  3. (botany) Alternative form of fascicle

Translations


French

Etymology

From Latin fasciculus.

Noun

fascicule m (plural fascicules)

  1. installment
  2. fascicle
  3. bundle

Latin

Noun

fascicule

  1. vocative singular of fasciculus

fascicule From the web:

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