Find the word definition

Crossword clues for caudate

The Collaborative International Dictionary
Caudate

Caudate \Cau"date\, Caudated \Cau"da*ted\ a. [L. cauda tail.] Having a tail; having a terminal appendage like a tail. Opposite of acaudate. [1913 Webster + WordNet 1.5] ||

Wiktionary
caudate

a. 1 (context botany English) Tapering into a long, tail-like extension at the apex. 2 (context zoology English) Having a tail. 3 (context zoology English) Of or pertaining to the ''Caudata'' order of amphibians.

WordNet
caudate
  1. n. a tail-shaped basal ganglion located in a lateral ventricle of the brain [syn: caudate nucleus]

  2. amphibians that resemble lizards [syn: urodele]

caudate
  1. adj. having a tail or taillike appendage [syn: caudated] [ant: acaudate]

  2. of a leaf shape; tapering gradually into a long taillike tip

Wikipedia
Caudate

Caudate (Latin for "tail") may refer to:

  • Caudate nucleus
  • Caudate leaf shape
  • Caudate lobe of liver
  • Cauda equina
  • A salamander (which is any member of the order Caudata)

Usage examples of "caudate".

If damage to the caudate is part of the treatment, why is her tic different?

And his doctors tinkered with parts of the caudate region, trying to ensure that Bobby did not suffer from symptoms relating to obsessive-compulsive disorder which led some people to a need for excessive security, order, predictability and ritual, a need in some circumstances satisfied by the membership of religious communities.

The First International Congress of Zoologists for Psychological Research into Caudate Amphibians.

A, are represented the caudated cells from the deep structure of the bladder.

On the hill sparse fires were dying under the twinkling snow, more persistent now, but to Baudolino one of them seemed a great caudate star, which moved in the sky towards the city that was wailing in birth pangs.

The basal ganglia, the caudate and globus pallidus, the hippocampus and amygdala.