Caesarian
pronunciation
How to pronounce Caesarian in British English: UK [siˈzeəriən]
How to pronounce Caesarian in American English: US [sɪˈzɛriən]
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- Adjective:
- relating to abdominal delivery
Word Origin
- caesarian
- caesarian: [17] The application of the adjective caesarian to the delivery of a baby by surgical incision through the abdomen and womb arises from the legend that Julius Caesar (c. 100–44 BC) himself or an earlier ancestor of his was born in this way. The name Caesar comes from the Latin phrase a caeso mātrisūtere, literally ‘from the mother’s cut womb’ (caesus was the past participle of the Latin verb caedere ‘cut’, from which English gets concise, incise, precise, etc). The abbreviation caesar for ‘caesarian section’ is mid 20th-century.=> concise, incise, precise
- caesarian (n.)
- 1923, shortening of Caesarian section (1610s); supposedly from Caius Julius Caesar, who was said to have been delivered surgically, thus legend traces his cognomen to Latin caesus past participle of caedere "to cut" (see -cide). But if this is the etymology of the name, it was likely an ancestor who was so born (Caesar's mother lived to see his triumphs and such operations would have been fatal to the woman in ancient times). And Pliny derives his cognomen from caesaries "head of hair," because the future dictator was born with a full one. Caesarian section may come directly from caesus.
Example
- 1. Caesarian section on the standing cow .
- 2. Visiting the clinic on another day , we go to the second floor to watch the doctors and nurses deliver a baby by caesarian section .
- 3. Clinical observation on reduction postpartum bleeding in caesarian section with use of misoprostol .
- 4. Objective : to analyze the change in ultrasound of caesarian section uterus after a year .
- 5. Abortion and caesarian section are widely used for non-medical or non-lifesaving reasons .