trochlea

English

Etymology

Borrowed from Latin trochlea (case or sheaf containing one or more pulleys, block).

Pronunciation

Noun

trochlea (plural trochleae or trochleas)

  1. (anatomy) A structure resembling or acting like a pulley.
    1. In the elbow joint, the articular surface of the lower extremity of the humerus, grasped by the trochlear notch of the ulna.
    2. A pulley-like cartilage through which the superior oblique muscle of the eyeball passes.

Derived terms

Translations

References

Further reading

Anagrams

Latin

Alternative forms

Etymology

Contracted from Ancient Greek τροχῐλείᾱ (trokhileíā, pulley, block-and-tackle equipment), from τροχῐ́λος (trokhílos, sheave in block-and-tackle equipment) + -είᾱ (-eíā, nominal suffix).

Pronunciation

Noun

trochlea f (genitive trochleae); first declension

  1. mechanical contrivance for raising weights; case or sheaf containing one or more pulleys; pulley block

Inflection

First-declension noun.

Case Singular Plural
Nominative trochlea trochleae
Genitive trochleae trochleārum
Dative trochleae trochleīs
Accusative trochleam trochleās
Ablative trochleā trochleīs
Vocative trochlea trochleae

Descendants

  • Alemannic German: Trüegle
  • English: trochlea

References

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