different between ostomy vs ostomate

ostomy

English

Etymology

Back-formation from colostomy, ileostomy, gastrostomy, and similar terms.

Noun

ostomy (plural ostomies)

  1. (surgery) A surgical procedure to provide an exit point for the waste of an organism.
  2. (medicine) An exit point created by such surgical procedure.

Usage notes

The conversion of the combining form -ostomy to yield the standalone noun ostomy began in the mid-20th century as medical jargon that was treated as too much a casualism for formal writing, but by the early 21st century it was well established even in formal register, and various respected dictionaries now enter it. Before this transition of acceptability, medical English already had a word for artificial bodily openings created surgically: stoma, directly from the New Latin, based on the ancient Greek. But today such an opening is just as likely to be called an ostomy as a stoma.

Synonyms

  • stoma

Derived terms

  • ostomate

Related terms

  • stoma
  • -stomy
  • -ostomy
  • colostomy
  • ileostomy

Translations

ostomy From the web:

  • what ostomy supplies are covered by medicare
  • what ostomy means
  • what's ostomy bag
  • what ostomy surgery
  • ostomy what not to eat
  • ostomy what to expect
  • ostomy what to eat
  • ostomy what does it feel like


ostomate

English

Etymology

ostomy +? -ate (thing characterized by)

Noun

ostomate (plural ostomates)

  1. A person who has had an ostomy, a surgical operation to create an opening in the body for the discharge of body wastes.

Usage notes

  • Not used to refer to tracheostomy.

Related terms

  • colostomy
  • urostomy
  • ileostomy

Anagrams

  • tomatoes

ostomate From the web:

  • what is ostomate mean
  • what does ostomate mean
  • what is ostomate used for
  • what is ostomate
  • what does ostomate
  • what is the ostomate program
  • what is an ostomate person
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