Monday, 14 March 2011

Anatomical Terms and their Derivation



Anatomical Terms and their Derivation
F. Peter Lisowski; Charles E. Oxnard | 2007-01-03 00:00:00 | World Scientific Publishing | 136 | Hospital Administration
Anatomical terms are the vocabulary of medicine. Anatomy began as a descriptive science in the days when Latin was the universal scientific language. Early anatomists described the structures they saw in that language, comparing them to common and familiar objects, or borrowing terms from the Greek and Arabic masters before them. In anatomic terminology, common Latin or Greek words are used as such for any part of the body for which the ancients had a name. For many other structures, scientific names have been invented either by using certain classical words which appear to be descriptive of the part concerned, or commonly, by combining Greek or Latin roots to form a new compound term. Memorization of such terms without understanding their meaning can lead to mental indigestion.

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