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falciform

[ fal-suh-fawrm ]

adjective

  1. sickle-shaped; falcate.


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Other Words From

  • sub·falci·form adjective
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Word History and Origins

Origin of falciform1

1760–70; < Latin falci- (stem of falx ) sickle + -form
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Example Sentences

Galen asserts that all animals that are born when the moon is falciform, or at the half-quarter, are weak, feeble, and shortlived; whereas those that are dropped in the full moon are healthy and vigorous.

They also are falciform, but one extremity is rounded, the other pointed.

Into the ventral mesentery the liver grows as diverticula from the duodenum, so that some of the mesentery remains as the falciform ligament of the liver and some as the lesser omentum.

Galen, in the second century, taught that those who were born when the moon was falciform, or sickle-shaped, were weak and short-lived, while those born during the full moon were vigorous and of long life.

There was a certain grandeur about his great, dark visage, his falciform nose and meaty jowls as he stood there.

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