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fascicle
[ fas-i-kuhl ]
noun
- a section of a book or set of books being published in installments as separate pamphlets or volumes.
- a small bundle, tight cluster, or the like.
- Botany. a close cluster, as of flowers or leaves.
- Anatomy. a small bundle of nerve or muscle fibers.
fascicle
/ ˈfæsɪkəl; fəˈsɪkjʊˌleɪt; fəˈsɪkjʊlə; -lɪt /
noun
- a bundle or cluster of branches, leaves, etc
- Also calledfasciculus anatomy a small bundle of fibres, esp nerve fibres
- printing another name for fascicule
- any small bundle or cluster
fascicle
/ făs′ĭ-kəl /
- A bundle or cluster of stems, flowers, or leaves, such as the bundles in which pine needles grow.
Derived Forms
- ˈfascicled, adjective
- fasˈciculately, adverb
- fasˌcicuˈlation, noun
- fascicular, adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of fascicle1
Example Sentences
This gearing mechanism not only contributes to the overall elongation of the muscle but reduces the elongation of individual fascicles at any given time, preventing them from overstretching and getting injured.
The arrangement of fascicles gives muscles their various functions.
The poems in the real fascicles, which were disbound by editors, were copied out on folded stationery sheets.
Atkins mailed the pages to subscribers as she completed them; readers then sewed the fascicles together as they pleased.
Atkins continued the work — amounting to roughly 400 images — for 10 years, issuing new installments in fascicle, or booklet form, roughly every six months.
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