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View synonyms for anatomy

anatomy

[ uh-nat-uh-mee ]

noun

, plural a·nat·o·mies.
  1. the science dealing with the structure of animals and plants.
  2. the structure of an animal or plant, or of any of its parts.
  3. dissection of all or part of an animal or plant in order to study its structure.
  4. a plant or animal that has been or will be dissected, or a model of such a dissected organism.
  5. a skeleton.
  6. Informal. the human body.
  7. an analysis or minute examination.


anatomy

/ əˈnætəmɪ /

noun

  1. the science concerned with the physical structure of animals and plants
  2. the physical structure of an animal or plant or any of its parts
  3. a book or treatise on this subject
  4. dissection of an animal or plant
  5. any detailed analysis

    the anatomy of a crime

  6. informal.
    the human body


anatomy

/ ə-nătə-mē /

  1. The structure of an organism or any of its parts.
  2. The scientific study of the shape and structure of organisms and their parts.


anatomy

  1. The structure of an animal or plant; also, the study of this structure through techniques such as microscopic observation and dissection. ( Compare morphology and physiology .)


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Word History and Origins

Origin of anatomy1

First recorded in 1350–1400; Middle English, from Latin anatomia, from Greek anatom(ḗ) “dissection” (from ana- ana- + tomḗ “a cutting,” noun derivative of témnein “to cut”) + -ia -y 3

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Word History and Origins

Origin of anatomy1

C14: from Latin anatomia, from Greek anatomē, from anatemnein to cut up, from ana- + temnein to cut

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Example Sentences

The goal is to create a literary anatomy of the last century—or, to be precise, from 1900 to 2014.

They are the parts of the female anatomy so often the object of fantasies.

Saul Bass, the greatest designer of movie title sequences (Anatomy of a Murder, The Man with the Golden Arm) in Hollywood history.

Morbid Anatomy, with Ebenstein at the helm, seems to do it all, from publishing books to leading international trips.

Entering Morbid Anatomy from an unremarkable, industrial street in Brooklyn, its ground-floor coffee shop/bookstore is buzzing.

Quaint old Burton in his "Anatomy of Melancholy," recognizes the virtues of the plant while he anathematizes its abuse.

In the whole of anatomy there is no task so difficult as that of learning the precise attachments of the muscles of the back.

A celebrated Coach in Anatomy says that no one can learn Anatomy until he has learned and forgotten it from three to seven times!

Even in the details of anatomy some long-vanished character suddenly appears.

The anatomy is different, and the light falls on different textures, but the principle is not changed.

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