sphincter

English

Etymology

    Learned borrowing from Late Latin sphinctēr (the muscle of the anus), from Ancient Greek σφῐγκτήρ (sphĭnktḗr, lace, band; contractile muscle), ultimately of Pre-Greek origin. Possibly related to sphinx (the strangler).

    Pronunciation

    • (General American) IPA(key): /ˈsfɪŋk.tɚ/
      • Audio (Southern England):(file)

    Noun

    sphincter (plural sphincters or sphincteres)

    1. (anatomy) A ringlike band of muscle that surrounds a bodily opening (such as the anus or the openings of the stomach), constricting and relaxing as required for normal physiological functioning.
      Hyponyms: anal sphincter, lissosphincter, lower esophageal sphincter, pyloric sphincter, rhabdosphincter, sphincter of Oddi, upper esophageal sphincter, urethral sphincter
      the sphincter of the bladder
      the iris sphincter in the eye

    Derived terms

    Translations

    See also

    References

    French

    Etymology

    Borrowed from Late Latin sphinctēr (the muscle of the anus), from Ancient Greek σφῐγκτήρ (sphĭnktḗr, lace, band; contractile muscle).

    Pronunciation

    • IPA(key): /sfɛ̃k.tɛʁ/
    • Audio:(file)

    Noun

    sphincter m (plural sphincters)

    1. (anatomy) sphincter

    Further reading

    Latin

    Etymology

    Borrowed from Ancient Greek σφῐγκτήρ (sphĭnktḗr, lace, band; contractile muscle), from σφῐ́γγω (sphĭ́ngō, to bind tight or fast) +‎ -τήρ (-tḗr, -er, -or, nominal suffix).

    Pronunciation

    Noun

    sphinctēr m (genitive sphinctēris); third declension (Late Latin)

    1. (anatomy) The , the muscle of the anus.

    Inflection

    Third-declension noun.

    singular plural
    nominative sphinctēr sphinctērēs
    genitive sphinctēris sphinctērum
    dative sphinctērī sphinctēribus
    accusative sphinctērem sphinctērēs
    ablative sphinctēre sphinctēribus
    vocative sphinctēr sphinctērēs

    Descendants

    • English: sphincter
    • French: sphincter