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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Fundus

Fundus \Fun"dus\ (f[u^]n"d[u^]s), n. [L., bottom.] (Anat.) The bottom or base of any hollow organ; as, the fundus of the bladder; the fundus of the eye; the fundus of the uterus.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
fundus

"bottom, depths; base of an organ," 1754, from Latin fundus "bottom" (see fund (n.)). In any general use it probably is extended from specific senses in anatomy.

Wiktionary
fundus

n. 1 (context anatomy English) the large, hollow part of an organ farthest from an opening; especially 2 # the top, hollow portion of the uterus and 3 # the back, interior part of the eye, accommodating the retina and associated blood vessels, etc. 4 # the uppermost hollow of the stomach, which in humans forms a bulge above where the oesophagus enters the stomach. 5 # the deepest part of a sulcus, such as the sulci in the human cerebral cortex.

WordNet
fundus
  1. n. (anatomy) the base of a hollow organ or that part farthest from its opening; "the uterine fundus"

  2. [also: fundi (pl)]

Wikipedia
Fundus

Fundus (Latin for "bottom") is an anatomical term referring to that part of a concavity in any organ, which is at the far end from its opening. It may refer to:

Fundus (uterus)

The fundus of the uterus is the top portion, opposite from the cervix.

Fundal height, measured from the top of the pubic bone, is routinely measured in pregnancy to determine growth rates. If the measurement is smaller or larger than what would be expected for gestational age, it can be a crude indicator of an abnormality (for example, a breech or sideways presentation, twins, or a placental issue), requiring further tests such as ultrasound to determine the exact nature of the problem, if any.

Fundus (eye)

The fundus of the eye is the interior surface of the eye opposite the lens and includes the retina, optic disc, macula, fovea, and posterior pole. The fundus can be examined by ophthalmoscopy and/or fundus photography. The term fundus may also be inclusive of Bruch's membrane and the choroid.

Fundus (seabed)

The fundus is the seabed in a tidal river below low water mark. This can be owned by the foreshore owner (area between high and low water mark) and may require permission and rent, if used for laying a mooring or putting down crab or lobster pots.

Usage examples of "fundus".

Vitruvius or those who followed his faction, but in behalf of the people of Fundi, whose exemption from any blame in the war had been proved by Vitruvius himself, when he made Privernum his place of retreat, and not his native country, Fundi.

One is the bas-relief signed by Antonianos of Aphrodisias and found some fifty years ago on the property of an agronomic institute, the Fundi Rustici, in the Committee Room of which it is now placed.

The fundus presses forcibly against the rectum, while the upper part of the vagina bends abruptly and forms an acute angle near the mouth of the uterus.

This term designates another unnatural position of the uterus, in which the fundus, or upper part of the organ, falls forward, as illustrated by Fig.

In its natural position, the fundus of the uterus is slightly inclined forward, and any pressure, or forward traction, is liable to cause it to fall still further in that direction.

The fundus of the womb is its upper part, when in its natural position.

Above this to the fundus or base is a triangular and flat space called the cavity.

The close adherence of the tubes and ovaries to the fundus necessitated their removal.

The organ was larger than it should be, the fundus well above the level of the pubic bone, the walls spongey.

I have to make sure the fundus is well contracted and check that the afterbirth is complete.

But as soon as they were united at Anagni and Fundi, in a place of security, they cast aside the mask, accused their own falsehood and hypocrisy, excommunicated the apostate and antichrist of Rome, and proceeded to a new election of Robert of Geneva, Clement the Seventh, whom they announced to the nations as the true and rightful vicar of Christ.

In two of the cases the hysteropexy had been performed over five years before the pregnancy occurred, and, although the bands of adhesion between the fundus and the parietes must have become very tough after so long a period, no special difficulty was encountered.

The fundus could be clearly seen through all of the pupils, and there was no posterior staphyloma nor any choroidal changes.

One is the bas-relief signed by Antonianos of Aphrodisias and found some fifty years ago on the property of an agronomic institute, the Fundi Rustici, in the Committee Room of which it is now placed.

The fundus could be clearly seen through all of the pupils, and there was no posterior staphyloma nor any choroidal changes.