Pallidum
pallidum pal·li·dum (pāl’ĭ-dəm)
n.
See globus pallidus.
Read Also:
- Palling
[pal] /pæl/ Informal. noun 1. a very close, intimate friend; comrade; chum. 2. an accomplice. verb (used without object), palled, palling. 3. to associate as comrades or chums: to pal around with the kid next door. [pawl] /pɔl/ noun 1. a cloth, often of velvet, for spreading over a coffin, bier, or tomb. 2. a […]
- Pallium
[pal-ee-uh m] /ˈpæl i əm/ noun, plural pallia [pal-ee-uh] /ˈpæl i ə/ (Show IPA), palliums. 1. a large, rectangular mantle worn by men in ancient Greece and Rome. 2. Ecclesiastical. 3. Anatomy. the entire cortex of the cerebrum. 4. Zoology. a mantle, as of a mollusk or bird. /ˈpælɪəm/ noun (pl) -lia (-lɪə), -liums 1. […]
- Pall-like
[pawl] /pɔl/ noun 1. a cloth, often of velvet, for spreading over a coffin, bier, or tomb. 2. a coffin. 3. anything that covers, shrouds, or overspreads, especially with darkness or gloom. 4. Ecclesiastical. 5. Heraldry. . 6. Archaic. a cloth spread upon an altar; corporal. 7. Archaic. a garment, especially a robe, cloak, or […]
- Pall-mall
[pel-mel, pal-mal, pawl-mawl] /ˈpɛlˈmɛl, ˈpælˈmæl, ˈpɔlˈmɔl/ noun 1. a game, popular in the 17th century, in which a ball of boxwood was struck with a mallet in an attempt to drive it through a raised iron ring at the end of a playing alley. 2. a playing alley on which this game was played. [pal […]
- Pallor
[pal-er] /ˈpæl ər/ noun 1. unusual or extreme paleness, as from fear, ill health, or death; wanness. /ˈpælə/ noun 1. a pale condition, esp when unnatural: fear gave his face a deathly pallor n. c.1400, from Old French palor “paleness, whiteness” (12c.) and directly from Latin pallor, from pallere “be pale, turn pale,” related to […]