Find the word definition

Crossword clues for plexus

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
plexus
noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
solar plexus
▪ a blow to the solar plexus
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
solar
▪ A drop of juniper can also be rubbed into your forearms and solar plexus.
▪ You go crazy with the frustration and throw a bad punch and take his counter in your mouth or solar plexus.
▪ He began to work on the body, aiming for the solar plexus all the time.
▪ When I finally saw his face, the muscles surrounding my solar plexus contracted fiercely with the shock of recognition.
▪ The impact of that failure must have been like a fierce left hook in the solar plexus.
▪ You could then lean back and pick up the front foot, thrusting it straight into the opponent's solar plexus.
▪ Had the batsman not ducked, the ball might have struck him in the solar plexus.
▪ It was like a jagged knife, jerking in her solar plexus.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ A drop of juniper can also be rubbed into your forearms and solar plexus.
▪ Further protostome diversification led to a plexus of annelids, molluscs and near relatives.
▪ He began to work on the body, aiming for the solar plexus all the time.
▪ The effects of serotonin on gastrointestinal motor function are generally believed to be mediated through myenteric plexus neurons.
▪ The efferent glomerular capillaries form a capillary plexus surrounding the proximal tubules.
▪ The impact of that failure must have been like a fierce left hook in the solar plexus.
▪ When I finally saw his face, the muscles surrounding my solar plexus contracted fiercely with the shock of recognition.
▪ You go crazy with the frustration and throw a bad punch and take his counter in your mouth or solar plexus.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Plexus

Plexus \Plex"us\, n.; pl. L. Plexus, E. Plexuses. [L., a twining, braid, fr. plectere, plexum, to twine, braid.]

  1. (Anat.) A network of vessels, nerves, or fibers.

  2. (Math.) The system of equations required for the complete expression of the relations which exist between a set of quantities.
    --Brande & C.

  3. A network; an intricate or interwoven combination of elements or parts in a coherent structure.

    In the perception of a tree the reference to an object is circumscribed and directed by a plexus of visual and other presentations.
    --G. F. Stout.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
plexus

1680s, Modern Latin, literally "braid, network," noun use of past participle of Latin plectere "to twine, braid, fold" (see complex (adj.)); used of a network, such as solar plexus "network of nerves in the abdomen" (see solar). Related: Plexal.

Wiktionary
plexus

n. 1 A network or interwoven mass, especially (context anatomy English) of nerves, blood vessels, or lymphatic vessels. 2 (context math English) The system of equations required for the complete expression of the relations which exist between a set of quantities.

WordNet
plexus

n. a network of intersecting blood vessels or intersecting nerves or intersecting lymph vessels [syn: rete]

Wikipedia
Plexus

A plexus (from the Latin for "braid") is a branching network of vessels or nerves. The vessels may be blood vessels (veins, capillaries) or lymphatic vessels. The nerves are typically axons outside the central nervous system.

Although many medical words ending in -us that came to English from Latin have the plural suffix -i (and the plural form plexi indeed does exist in Latin), English does not use the -us/-i pattern for this particular term; the standard plural form in English is plexuses.

Plexus (disambiguation)

Plexus may refer to:

  • Plexus, a network of nerves or blood vessels
    • Nervous plexus
    • Choroid plexus
    • Venous plexus
    • Cardiac plexus
    • Celiac plexus
  • Plexus, the title of a 1953 novel by Henry Miller, part of the The Rosy Crucifixion trilogy
  • Plexus Consulting Group, is a management consulting firm to non-profit and public service sectors
  • Plexus Corporation, the name of a worldwide contract engineering and manufacturing company
  • The Plexus Rangers, in the comic book series American Flagg!, the Earthbound police force of an absentee government called The "Plex"

Usage examples of "plexus".

Gaius Justus Gallicus with his short sword sunk to the hilt in the solar plexus of Jeremiah.

Actually, it is the bluish-white light which emanates from the pharyngeal plexus.

Communication was effected through the pituitary body and also by means of the orangefiery and scarlet rays emanating from the sacral region and solar plexus.

There is a resultant active circulation of the fluid from the chorioid plexuses, where it leaks out of the blood, through the ventricles, out into the sub-arachnoid space, and through the arachnoid villi, where it is absorbed back into the blood.

My toes curled and my foot flexed, reveling in the delicate touch of the thumb that traced its way from the ball of my foot down the high arch and up into the hollow below my anklebone, managing to stimulate an entire plexus of sensation.

He stared down in amazement at the colichemarde buried in his solar plexus.

This includes difficulties in memory, speech, and coordination, due to brain oxygen starvation in the orbital gyri of both frontal lobes, as well as the cerebral choroid plexus.

One must, therefore, rely on absolutely precise bullet placement either in the brain or in a major nerve plexus when using such rounds, and the ease of shooting rimfires as well as the low cost of their ammunition seems to offer the best opportunity for developing the necessary level of skill.

The slave seed had sprouted in seconds, filaments wriggling like screwworms into his celiac plexus.

As she drove in under the cut, Beme whipped a straight-leg roundhouse kick at her ribs while holding his Buckler across his solar plexus to stop her knife thrust.

I adjusted the distance between us with a short ballestra and, just as both his feet left the ground, gave him an ungentle side-kick to the solar plexus.

Some of them were integral with patches of artificial skin that were busy melding with his spoiled dermal layers, infusing regeneration virals into the plexus of capil laries.

The girls handled the charismata of human emotions as naturally as breathing, but neither of them had ever made sense of the Chenzeme version, so on that score, the sensory plexus Deneb had made for them was a failure.

In the membranes surrounding the ventricles there are intricate networks of fine blood vessels called chorioid plexuses (koh'ree-oid plek'sus-ez.

There is a resultant active circulation of the fluid from the chorioid plexuses, where it leaks out of the blood, through the ventricles, out into the sub-arachnoid space, and through the arachnoid villi, where it is absorbed back into the blood.