- The
acetabulum (/ˌæsɪˈtæbjələm/; pl.:
acetabula), also
called the
cotyloid cavity, is a
concave surface of the pelvis. The head of the
femur meets with...
- wider, more
curved posteriorly, and has a less
pronounced promontory. The
acetabula are
wider apart in
females than in males. In males, the
acetabulum faces...
- cups and
balls used as a
confidence trick. The effect, also
known as
acetabula et calculi, was
performed by
Roman conjurers as far back as two thousand...
-
Samuel Frederick Gray in
Macroscyphus (1821), and
Leopold ****el in
Acetabula (1870). The
trend continued, with
Claude Casimir Gillet with
placing it...
-
organ with
specific systems for
fastening itself to materials: rostrum,
acetabula, suckers, bothria, grooves, and hooks. The
small neck region, directly...
-
Scolex of
Taenia solium with
hooks and
acetabula (suckers) present...
- (
acetabula ). Further, the
words were used for
bells or
cymbals that had that bowl shape, worn and pla**** by
dancers (cymbals in the form of
acetabula...
- female's hips
while walking. The
acetabula not only
differ in distance, but
depth as well. It has been
found that
female acetabula have a
greater depth than...
- List
Peziza ancilis Pers. (1822)
Aleuria ancilis (Pers.)
Gillet (1879)
Acetabula ancilis (Pers.)
Lambotte (1880)
Helvella ancilis (Pers.) Quél. (1886)...
-
Acetabulum /æsɪˈtæbjʊləm/ (pl.:
acetabula) in
invertebrate zoology is a saucer-shaped
organ of
attachment in some
annelid worms (like leech) and flatworms...