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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Menstruated

Menstruate \Men"stru*ate\, v. i. [imp. & p. p. Menstruated; p. pr. & vb. n. Menstruating.] To discharge the menses; to have the catamenial flow.

Wiktionary
menstruated

vb. (en-past of: menstruate)

Usage examples of "menstruated".

The other case was quite peculiar, the woman being a prostitute, who menstruated from time to time through spots, the size of a five-franc piece, developing on the breasts, buttocks, back, axilla, and epigastrium.

Pare says the wife of Pierre de Feure, an iron merchant, living at Chasteaudun, menstruated such quantities from the breasts each month that several serviettes were necessary to receive the discharge.

Hospital, London, 1876, in which the young girl menstruated vicariously from the nipple and stomach.

In a London discussion there was mentioned the case of a healthy woman of fifty who never was pregnant, and whose menstruation had ceased two years previously, but who for twelve months had menstruated regularly from the nipples, the hemorrhage being so profuse as to require constant change of napkins.

Deever records an instance of a child two years and seven months old who, with the exception of three months only, had menstruated regularly since the fourth month.

A case is on record of an infant who menstruated at the age of six months, and whose menses returned on the twenty-eighth day exactly.

She menstruated at three and continued to do so regularly, the flow lasting four days and being copious.

Emmet cites an instance of menstruation at seventy, and Brierre de Boismont one of a woman who menstruated regularly from her twenty-fourth year to the time of her death at ninety-two.

Kennard mentions a negress, aged ninety-one, who menstruated at fourteen, ceased at forty-nine, and at eighty-two commenced again, and was regular for four years, but had had no return since.

Du Peyrou de Cheyssiole and Bonhoure speak of an aged peasant woman, past ninety-one years of age, who menstruated regularly.

There is an instance on record of a female who menstruated every three months during the period from her fiftieth to her seventy-fourth year, the discharge, however, being very slight.

Rodsewitch speaks of a widow of a peasant who menstruated for the first time at the age of thirty-six.

An instance is known to the authors of a woman of forty who has never menstruated, though she is of exceptional vigor and development.

Dodd speaks of a child who menstruated early and continued up to the time of impregnation.

Carn describes a case of a child who menstruated at two, became pregnant at eight, and lived to an advanced age.