different between foramen vs projection
foramen
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Latin for?men (“aperture or opening produced by boring”).
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /f???e?.m?n/
- (General American) IPA(key): /f???e?.m?n/
- Rhymes: -e?m?n
Noun
foramen (plural foramina or foramens)
- (anatomy) An opening, an orifice, or a short passage, especially in a bone.
- Hyponyms: alar foramen, foramen cecum, foramen magnum, foramen of Magendie, foramen of Monro, foramen of Morgagni, foramen of Winslow, foramen ovale, foramen triosseum, neuroforamen, parietal foramen
Derived terms
- foraminal
- foraminate
- foraminous
References
- “foramen”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–present.
- “foramen”, in Merriam–Webster Online Dictionary, (Please provide a date or year).
See also
- meatus
Anagrams
- Foreman, foreman, name for
Latin
Etymology
From for? (“to pierce or bore”) +? -men (noun-forming suffix).
Pronunciation
- (Classical) IPA(key): /fo?ra?.men/, [f???ä?m?n]
- (Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): /fo?ra.men/, [f?????m?n]
Noun
for?men n (genitive for?minis); third declension
- (Classical Latin, rare) An opening or aperture produced by boring; a hole.
- (transferred sense, Late Latin) An opening, hole, cave.
- Synonym: caverna
Inflection
Third-declension noun (neuter, imparisyllabic non-i-stem).
Derived terms
- for?men ac?s
- for?min?tus
- for?min?sus
Related terms
- for?tus
- for?
Descendants
References
- foramen in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
- foramen in Charlton T. Lewis (1891) An Elementary Latin Dictionary, New York: Harper & Brothers
- foramen in Charles du Fresne du Cange’s Glossarium Mediæ et Infimæ Latinitatis (augmented edition, 1883–1887)
- foramen in Gaffiot, Félix (1934) Dictionnaire illustré Latin-Français, Hachette
Spanish
Etymology
Borrowed from Latin for?men (“aperture, opening”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /fo??amen/, [fo??a.m?n]
Noun
foramen m (plural forámenes)
- (anatomy) foramen
Derived terms
Related terms
- foraminífero
- perforar
- horadar
foramen From the web:
- what foramen is present in cervical vertebrae
- what goes through the vertebral foramen
- is there an 8th cervical vertebrae
- does c7 have transverse foramen
- do cervical vertebrae have transverse foramen
projection
English
Etymology
From either the Middle French projection or its etymon, the Classical Latin pr?iecti? (stem: pr?iecti?n-), from pr?ici?. Compare the Modern French projection, the German Projektion, and the Italian proiezione.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /p???d??k??n/
- Rhymes: -?k??n
Noun
projection (countable and uncountable, plural projections)
- Something which projects, protrudes, juts out, sticks out, or stands out.
- The face of the cliff had many projections that were big enough for birds to nest on.
- The action of projecting or throwing or propelling something.
- (archaic) The throwing of materials into a crucible, hence the transmutation of metals.
- (archaic) The crisis or decisive point of any process, especially a culinary process.
- The display of an image by devices such as movie projector, video projector, overhead projector or slide projector.
- A forecast or prognosis obtained by extrapolation
- (psychology) A belief or assumption that others have similar thoughts and experiences as oneself
- (photography) The image that a translucent object casts onto another object.
- (cartography) Any of several systems of intersecting lines that allow the curved surface of the earth to be represented on a flat surface. The set of mathematics used to calculate coordinate positions.
- (geometry) An image of an object on a surface of fewer dimensions.
- (linear algebra) An idempotent linear transformation which maps vectors from a vector space onto a subspace.
- (mathematics) A transformation which extracts a fragment of a mathematical object.
- (category theory) A morphism from a categorical product to one of its (two) components.
Synonyms
- (something which sticks out): protuberance
Derived terms
Related terms
- project
Translations
Further reading
- projection on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
French
Pronunciation
Noun
projection f (plural projections)
- projection
- screening (of a film)
Interlingua
Noun
projection (plural projectiones)
- projection
projection From the web:
- what projection is google maps
- what projection is google earth
- what projection means
- what projection is lat long
- what projection to use for united states
- what projection should i use
- what projection preserves area
- what projection to use
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