báculo

See also: baculo

Portuguese

Etymology

Learned borrowing from Latin baculum, from Proto-Indo-European *bak-.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈba.ku.lu/

  • Rhymes: -akulu
  • Hyphenation: bá‧cu‧lo

Noun

báculo m (plural báculos)

  1. crosier (staff of a bishop or abbot)
  2. (zootomy) baculum (bone found in the penis of some mammals)
    • 2011 November, “Estudo morfológico dos órgãos genitais masculinos do guaxinim (Procyon cancrivorus) [Morphological study of raccon male genital organs]”, in Pesquisa Veterinária Brasileira, volume 31, number 11, Rio de Janeiro: CBPA, →DOI, page 1026, column 2:
      O pênis possuía o osso báculo, e ventralmente o músculo bulboesponjoso com coloração enegrecida devido à vascularização e fina membrana conjuntiva.
      The penis has the baculum bone, and ventrally the bulbospongiosus muscle [has] a darkened color due to vascularization and the thin conjunctive membrane.
  3. (botany) cosier (young fern frond)

Further reading

Spanish

Etymology

Learned borrowing from Latin baculum, from Proto-Indo-European *bak-.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈbakulo/ [ˈba.ku.lo]
  • Rhymes: -akulo
  • Syllabification: bá‧cu‧lo

Noun

báculo m (plural báculos)

  1. staff (long, straight stick, especially one used to assist in walking)
    Synonym: bastón

Further reading