different between fleam vs flehm

fleam

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /fli?m/
  • Rhymes: -i?m

Etymology 1

From Middle English fleme, fleom, from Old French flieme, flemie (open vein), probably via a Proto-Germanic source (compare Old Saxon fl?ma, Old High German fliotuma, fliodema, Old English fl?tme, fl?tme (fleam, lancet)), borrowed from Vulgar Latin fletoma, *fletomus, from Late Latin flebotomus, phlebotomus, from Ancient Greek ?????????? (phlebotómon). Compare French flamme, Dutch vlijm, German Fliete, Danish flitte (fleam). Doublet of phlebotome.

Alternative forms

  • phleam (archaic)

Noun

fleam (plural fleams)

  1. A sharp instrument used to open a vein, to lance gums, or the like.
    • 1831-1850, William Youatt, On the Structure and the Diseases of the Horse
      A bloodstick - a piece of hard wood loaded at one end with lead — is used to strike the fleam into the vein
Hypernyms
  • (sharp instrument): lancet
Derived terms
  • fleam saw
  • fleam tooth
Translations

Etymology 2

From Middle English fleem, flem (the rushing of water; current), probably from Old English fl?am (fleeing; flight; rush), from Proto-Germanic *flaumaz (stream; current; flood), from Proto-Indo-European *plew- (to fly; flow; run). Cognate with Norwegian Nynorsk flaum (flood).

Alternative forms

  • fleem

Noun

fleam (plural fleams)

  1. (Britain, dialectal, Northern England) The watercourse or runoff from a mill; millstream
  2. (Britain, dialectal, Northern England) A large trench or gully cut into a meadow in order to drain it
Related terms
  • fleme (verb)

Anagrams

  • femal, flame

Latin

Verb

fleam

  1. first-person singular present active subjunctive of fle?

Old English

Etymology

From Proto-Germanic *flaumaz.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /flæ???m/

Noun

fl?am m

  1. escape, flight

Declension

Derived terms

  • fl?ema
  • t?fl?am

fleam From the web:



flehm

English

Alternative forms

  • (verb): flehmen
  • (noun): see flehmen

Etymology

From German flehmen.

Verb

flehm (third-person singular simple present flehms, present participle flehming, simple past and past participle flehmed)

  1. (intransitive) To exhibit the flehmen response, i.e., to draw back the lips, allowing scent to reach the Jacobson’s organ, an auxiliary olfactory organ found in many animals.

Noun

flehm (plural flehms)

  1. Alternative form of flehmen

flehm From the web:

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