carotides
French
Latin
Etymology
Borrowed from Ancient Greek κᾰρωτῐ́δες (karōtídes, “carotid arteries”), from κᾰρόω (karóō, “to plunge into deep sleep or torpor”) + -τῐ́δες (-tídes, plural nominal suffix), from the fact that the carotid artery supplies blood to the brain, and interruption of this flow causes loss of consciousness.
Pronunciation
- (modern Italianate Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): /kaˈro.ti.des/, [käˈrɔːt̪id̪es]
Noun
carōtides f pl (genitive carōtidum); third declension (New Latin)
- (anatomy) the carotid arteries
Inflection
Third-declension noun (Greek-type, normal variant), plural only.
| Case | Plural |
|---|---|
| Nominative | carōtides |
| Genitive | carōtidum |
| Dative | carōtidibus |
| Accusative | carōtidas |
| Ablative | carōtidibus |
| Vocative | carōtides |
Descendants
- → English: carotid
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