Antothite


antothite

an inhabitant of anathoth, found only in 1 chr. 11:28; 12:3. in 2 sam. 23:27 it is anethothite; in 1 chr. 27:12, anetothite. (r.v., “anathothite.”)

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  • Antrum

    a cavity in a body organ, especially a bone. historical examples the antrum pyloric-m is small and not very distinctly marked. encyclopaedia britannica, 11th edition, volume 13, slice 6 various we found that the tumor did extend from the antrum, into which i could bore my finger easily. new, old, and forgotten remedies: papers by […]

  • Antra

    a cavity in a body organ, especially a bone. noun (pl) -tra (-trə) (anatomy) a natural cavity, hollow, or sinus, esp in a bone n. “a cave or cavity,” late 14c., medical latin, from greek antron “cave.” antrum an·trum (ān’trəm) n. pl. an·tra (-trə) a nearly closed cavity or chamber, especially in a bone. the […]

  • Antral

    a cavity in a body organ, especially a bone. noun (pl) -tra (-trə) (anatomy) a natural cavity, hollow, or sinus, esp in a bone n. “a cave or cavity,” late 14c., medical latin, from greek antron “cave.” antrum an·trum (ān’trəm) n. pl. an·tra (-trə) a nearly closed cavity or chamber, especially in a bone. the […]

  • Antre

    a cavern; cave. historical examples note the ant-thesis in the same line, antre de rois, louvre de voleurs. la lgende des sicles victor hugo antre is a generic term for cave, and as trou means hole, the word antrou is also equivalent to old hole. archaic england harold bayley noun (archaic) a cavern or cave

  • Antrectomy

    antrectomy antrectomy an·trec·to·my (ān-trěk’tə-mē) n. excision of an antrum, such as removing the pyloric antrum of the stomach.


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