femur
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++LDOCE 5++fe·mur /ˈfiːmə $ -ər/ noun [countable] medical HBAthe thigh bone 股骨 →5 see picture at 见图 skeleton —femoral /ˈfemərəl/ adjective [only before noun]
Examples from the Corpus
femur• The hip and femur bones were fused together and no movement was possible at that joint.• Fig. 3.8 Relative completeness of the humerus and femur compared.• But can not phone him from Twills as Mr Twill would insist on shinning up drainpipe himself and break femur.• Feel that Mr Twill may be called upon to lay down his femur after all.• The horizontal axis has the most frequently preserved part of the bone, namely the distal humerus and proximal femur.• It sheared through bone and muscle alike, the strident snapping of the femur reverberating inside the room.• The glittering blue thigh had articulated sharply in the middle, shortening along its length and snapping the femur within.Origin femur (1700-1800) Latin “thigh”fe·mur nounChineseSyllable
the Corpus bone thigh
femur
fe‧mur /ˈfiːmə $ -ər/
noun [countable] medical
—femoral /ˈfemərəl/ adjective [only before noun]
fe‧mur /ˈfiːmə $ -ər/
noun [countable] medical Date: 1700-1800
Language: Latin
Origin: 'thigh'
the thigh boneLanguage: Latin
Origin: 'thigh'
—femoral /ˈfemərəl/ adjective [only before noun]
