occipitalis

English

Etymology

Unadapted borrowing from New Latin occipitālis, ellipsis of mūsculus occipitālis (occipital muscle). Doublet of occipital.

Pronunciation

Noun

occipitalis (plural occipitales)

  1. (anatomy) A muscle of the head that arises from the lateral two-thirds of the superior nuchal lines and from the mastoid part of the temporal bone, inserts into the galea aponeurotica, and acts to move the scalp; it is sometimes considered to be part of the occipitofrontalis muscle.
    Coordinate term: frontalis

Translations

References

Latin

Etymology

From occiput (the back of the head, occiput) + -ālis (-al, adjectival suffix).

Pronunciation

Adjective

occipitālis (neuter occipitāle); third-declension two-termination adjective (Medieval Latin)

  1. (anatomy) occipital

Inflection

Third-declension two-termination adjective.

Number Singular Plural
Case / Gender Masc./Fem. Neuter Masc./Fem. Neuter
Nominative occipitālis occipitāle occipitālēs occipitālia
Genitive occipitālis occipitālium
Dative occipitālī occipitālibus
Accusative occipitālem occipitāle occipitālēs
occipitālīs
occipitālia
Ablative occipitālī occipitālibus
Vocative occipitālis occipitāle occipitālēs occipitālia

Descendants

  • English: occipitalis
  • Middle French: occipital
  • Italian: occipitale
  • Sicilian: uccipitali
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