Word form for bone

Значение слова «OSTEO» найдено в 8 источниках

• ‘Bone’ starter

• Bone combiner

• Bone prefix

• Bone word form

• Arthritis preceder

• Beginning of a path

• Bone (comb. Form)

• Bone (Pref.)

• Bone head?

• Bone opener

• Bone start

• Bone, in combinations

• Bony beginning

• Bony opening

• Bony prefix

• Bony starter

• It means bone

• Kind of path

• Lead-in to arthritis or porosis

• Medical prefix

• Medical specialist’s prefix

• Path beginning

• Path lead-in

• Path opening?

• Path preceder

• Path prefix

• Path start

• Prefix for path

• Prefix in medicine

• Prefix meaning bone

• Prefix with -pathy

• Prefix with -plasty

• Prefix with arthritis

• Prefix with sclerosis

• Relating to bone

• Start of a path?

• Word form for ‘bone’

osteo-: übersetzung

os|teo-, Os|teo- [

griech.

ostéon]:

Best.

in

Zus.

mit der

Bed.

Knochen (z. B. osteogen, Osteologie).

* * *

os|teo-, Os|teo- [griech. ostéon] <Best. in Zus. mit der Bed.>: Knochen (z. B. osteoplastisch, Osteologie).

[ʹɒstıə(ʋ)-]

кость:

osteochondrosis — остеохондроз

osteopathy — остеопатия

{ʹɒstıə(ʋ)-} (тж. oste-)

в сложных словах имеет значение кость:

osteochondrosis — остеохондроз

osteopathy — остеопатия

1. osteologic(al) — остеологический;

2. osteology — остеология

osteo-
[ʹɒstıə(ʋ)-] (тж. oste-)
в сложных словах имеет значение кость:
osteochondrosis — остеохондроз
osteopathy — остеопатия

osteo-
1> в сложных словах имеет значение: кость
_Ex:
osteochondrosis остеохондроз

мед.прил. остео
Англо-русский медицинский словарь.2012.

Prefixes of bone

  • backbone

    • noun a central cohesive source of support and stability
      mainstay; linchpin; lynchpin; keystone; anchor.
      • faith is his anchor
      • the keystone of campaign reform was the ban on soft money
      • he is the linchpin of this firm
    • noun fortitude and determination
      grit; gumption; guts; sand; moxie.
      • he didn’t have the guts to try it

    • More ‘backbone’ Meaning
    • backbone Idioms/Phrases
    • backbone Associated Words
    • backbone Prefix/Suffix Words
    • backbone Related Words
  • trombone

    • noun a brass instrument consisting of a long tube whose length can be varied by a U-shaped slide

    • More ‘trombone’ Meaning
    • trombone Idioms/Phrases
    • trombone Associated Words
    • trombone Prefix/Suffix Words
    • trombone Related Words
  • collarbone

    • noun bone linking the scapula and sternum
      clavicle.

    • More ‘collarbone’ Meaning
    • collarbone Associated Words
    • collarbone Prefix/Suffix Words
    • collarbone Related Words
  • breastbone

    • noun the flat bone that articulates with the clavicles and the first seven pairs of ribs
      sternum.

    • More ‘breastbone’ Meaning
    • breastbone Associated Words
    • breastbone Related Words
  • cheekbone

    • noun the arch of bone beneath the eye that forms the prominence of the cheek
      jugal bone; malar; malar bone; zygomatic; zygomatic bone; os zygomaticum.

    • More ‘cheekbone’ Meaning
    • cheekbone Associated Words
    • cheekbone Prefix/Suffix Words
    • cheekbone Related Words
  • fishbone

    • noun a bone of a fish

    • More ‘fishbone’ Meaning
    • fishbone Associated Words
    • fishbone Prefix/Suffix Words
    • fishbone Related Words
  • jawbone

    • noun the jaw in vertebrates that is hinged to open the mouth
      jowl; mandible; lower jaw; submaxilla; lower jawbone; mandibula; mandibular bone.
    • verb talk idly or casually and in a friendly way
      shmoose; shmooze; schmoose; schmooze.

    • More ‘jawbone’ Meaning
    • jawbone Idioms/Phrases
    • jawbone Associated Words
    • jawbone Prefix/Suffix Words
    • jawbone Related Words
  • wishbone

    • noun the furcula of a domestic fowl
      wishing bone.

    • More ‘wishbone’ Meaning
    • wishbone Associated Words
    • wishbone Prefix/Suffix Words
    • wishbone Related Words
  • whalebone

    • noun a horny material from the upper jaws of certain whales; used as the ribs of fans or as stays in corsets
      baleen.

    • More ‘whalebone’ Meaning
    • whalebone Idioms/Phrases
    • whalebone Associated Words
    • whalebone Prefix/Suffix Words
    • whalebone Related Words
  • herringbone

    • noun a twilled fabric with a herringbone pattern
    • noun a pattern of columns of short parallel lines with all the lines in one column sloping one way and lines in adjacent columns sloping the other way; it is used in weaving, masonry, parquetry, embroidery
      herringbone pattern.

    • More ‘herringbone’ Meaning
    • herringbone Idioms/Phrases
    • herringbone Associated Words
    • herringbone Related Words
  • hipbone

    • noun large flaring bone forming one half of the pelvis; made up of the ilium and ischium and pubis
      innominate bone.

    • More ‘hipbone’ Meaning
    • hipbone Associated Words
    • hipbone Prefix/Suffix Words
    • hipbone Related Words
  • anklebone

    • noun the bone in the ankle that articulates with the leg bones to form the ankle joint
      talus; astragal; astragalus.

    • More ‘anklebone’ Meaning
    • anklebone Associated Words
    • anklebone Related Words
  • marrowbone

    • noun a bone containing edible marrow; used especially in flavoring soup

    • More ‘marrowbone’ Meaning
    • marrowbone Associated Words
    • marrowbone Prefix/Suffix Words
    • marrowbone Related Words
  • debone

    • verb remove the bones from
      bone.
      • bone the turkey before roasting it

    • More ‘debone’ Meaning
    • debone Associated Words
    • debone Prefix/Suffix Words
    • debone Related Words
  • thighbone

    • noun the longest and thickest bone of the human skeleton; extends from the pelvis to the knee
      femur; femoris.

    • More ‘thighbone’ Meaning
    • thighbone Associated Words
    • thighbone Prefix/Suffix Words
    • thighbone Related Words
  • shinbone

    • noun the inner and thicker of the two bones of the human leg between the knee and ankle
      shin; shin bone; tibia.

    • More ‘shinbone’ Meaning
    • shinbone Associated Words
    • shinbone Prefix/Suffix Words
    • shinbone Related Words
  • redbone

    • noun a speedy red or red-and-tan American hound

    • More ‘redbone’ Meaning
    • redbone Associated Words
    • redbone Related Words
  • aitchbone

    • noun a cut of beef including the H-shaped rump bone

    • More ‘aitchbone’ Meaning
    • aitchbone Associated Words
    • aitchbone Related Words


Suffixes of bone

  • bones

    • noun a percussion instrument consisting of a pair of hollow pieces of wood or bone (usually held between the thumb and fingers) that are made to click together (as by Spanish dancers) in rhythm with the dance
      finger cymbals; clappers; castanets.
    • noun rigid connective tissue that makes up the skeleton of vertebrates
      os; bone.

    • More ‘bones’ Meaning
    • bones Associated Words
    • bones Prefix/Suffix Words
    • bones Related Words
  • boned

    • adjective satellite having had the bones removed
      deboned.
      • a boneless rib roast
      • a boned (or deboned) fish
    • verb study intensively, as before an exam
      drum; grind away; swot up; bone up; get up; bone; cram; mug up; swot.
      • I had to bone up on my Latin verbs before the final exam

    • More ‘boned’ Meaning
    • boned Associated Words
    • boned Prefix/Suffix Words
    • boned Related Words
  • boney

    • adjective having bones especially many or prominent bones
      bony.
      • a bony shad fillet
      • her bony wrist
      • bony fish
    • adjective satellite being very thin
      underweight; scraggy; skinny; scrawny; weedy.
      • a child with skinny freckled legs
      • a long scrawny neck

    • More ‘boney’ Meaning
    • boney Associated Words
    • boney Prefix/Suffix Words
    • boney Related Words
  • boner

    • noun an embarrassing mistake
      botch; boo-boo; flub; blooper; blunder; foul-up; pratfall; fuckup; bungle; bloomer.

    • More ‘boner’ Meaning
    • boner Associated Words
    • boner Prefix/Suffix Words
    • boner Related Words
  • bonefish

    • noun slender silvery marine fish found in tropical mud flats and mangrove lagoons
      Albula vulpes.

    • More ‘bonefish’ Meaning
    • bonefish Associated Words
    • bonefish Prefix/Suffix Words
    • bonefish Related Words
  • boneless

    • adjective being without a bone or bones
      • jellyfish are boneless

    • More ‘boneless’ Meaning
    • boneless Associated Words
    • boneless Prefix/Suffix Words
    • boneless Related Words
  • bonelike

    • adjective satellite resembling bone
      • a bonelike tumor

    • More ‘bonelike’ Meaning
    • bonelike Associated Words
    • bonelike Related Words
  • bonemeal

    • noun fertilizer made of ground bones

    • More ‘bonemeal’ Meaning
    • bonemeal Associated Words
    • bonemeal Related Words
  • bonehead

    • noun a stupid person; these words are used to express a low opinion of someone’s intelligence
      shithead; hammerhead; dunce; knucklehead; dunderhead; blockhead; fuckhead; dumbass; loggerhead; lunkhead; numskull; muttonhead.

    • More ‘bonehead’ Meaning
    • bonehead Associated Words
    • bonehead Prefix/Suffix Words
    • bonehead Related Words
  • boneset

    • noun European herb having small white, pink or purple flowers; naturalized as a weed in North America
      common comfrey; Symphytum officinale.
    • noun perennial herb of southeastern United States having white-rayed flower heads; formerly used as in folk medicine
      Eupatorium perfoliatum; thoroughwort; agueweed.

    • More ‘boneset’ Meaning
    • boneset Idioms/Phrases
    • boneset Associated Words
    • boneset Prefix/Suffix Words
    • boneset Related Words
  • bonesetter

    • noun someone (not necessarily a licensed physician) who sets broken bones

    • More ‘bonesetter’ Meaning
    • bonesetter Associated Words
    • bonesetter Prefix/Suffix Words
    • bonesetter Related Words
  • bonesetter

    • noun someone (not necessarily a licensed physician) who sets broken bones

    • More ‘bonesetter’ Meaning
    • bonesetters Related Words
  • bonehead

    • noun a stupid person; these words are used to express a low opinion of someone’s intelligence
      shithead; hammerhead; dunce; knucklehead; dunderhead; blockhead; fuckhead; dumbass; loggerhead; lunkhead; numskull; muttonhead.

    • More ‘bonehead’ Meaning
    • boneheads Associated Words
    • boneheads Related Words
  • boneshaker

    • noun any wheeled vehicle that is dilapidated and uncomfortable
      • that old bike without rubber tires was a real boneshaker

    • More ‘boneshaker’ Meaning
    • boneshaker Associated Words
    • boneshaker Related Words
  • boneheaded

    • adjective satellite (used informally) stupid
      duncical; loggerheaded; blockheaded; duncish; fatheaded; thick; wooden-headed; thick-skulled; thickheaded.

    • More ‘boneheaded’ Meaning
    • boneheaded Associated Words
    • boneheaded Related Words
  • boner

    • noun an embarrassing mistake
      botch; boo-boo; flub; blooper; blunder; foul-up; pratfall; fuckup; bungle; bloomer.

    • More ‘boner’ Meaning
    • boners Associated Words
    • boners Related Words
  • bonefish

    • noun slender silvery marine fish found in tropical mud flats and mangrove lagoons
      Albula vulpes.

    • More ‘bonefish’ Meaning
    • bonefishing Related Words
  • boneless

    • adjective being without a bone or bones
      • jellyfish are boneless

    • More ‘boneless’ Meaning
    • bonelessly Related Words
  • boneset

    • noun European herb having small white, pink or purple flowers; naturalized as a weed in North America
      common comfrey; Symphytum officinale.
    • noun perennial herb of southeastern United States having white-rayed flower heads; formerly used as in folk medicine
      Eupatorium perfoliatum; thoroughwort; agueweed.

    • More ‘boneset’ Meaning
    • bonesetting Related Words


Derived words of bone

  • cheekbone

    • noun the arch of bone beneath the eye that forms the prominence of the cheek
      jugal bone; malar; malar bone; zygomatic; zygomatic bone; os zygomaticum.

    • More ‘cheekbone’ Meaning
    • cheekbones Associated Words
    • cheekbones Related Words
  • backbone

    • noun a central cohesive source of support and stability
      mainstay; linchpin; lynchpin; keystone; anchor.
      • faith is his anchor
      • the keystone of campaign reform was the ban on soft money
      • he is the linchpin of this firm
    • noun fortitude and determination
      grit; gumption; guts; sand; moxie.
      • he didn’t have the guts to try it

    • More ‘backbone’ Meaning
    • backbones Associated Words
    • backbones Related Words
  • trombone

    • noun a brass instrument consisting of a long tube whose length can be varied by a U-shaped slide

    • More ‘trombone’ Meaning
    • trombones Associated Words
    • trombones Related Words
  • crossbones

    • noun two crossed bones (or a representation of two crossed bones) used as a symbol danger or death

    • More ‘crossbones’ Meaning
    • crossbones Idioms/Phrases
    • crossbones Associated Words
    • crossbones Related Words
  • ribbon

    • noun any long object resembling a thin line
      thread.
      • a mere ribbon of land
      • the lighted ribbon of traffic
      • from the air the road was a grey thread
      • a thread of smoke climbed upward
    • noun an award for winning a championship or commemorating some other event
      laurel wreath; decoration; palm; medallion; medal.

    • More ‘ribbon’ Meaning
    • ribboned Associated Words
    • ribboned Prefix/Suffix Words
    • ribboned Related Words
  • collarbone

    • noun bone linking the scapula and sternum
      clavicle.

    • More ‘collarbone’ Meaning
    • collarbones Associated Words
    • collarbones Related Words
  • hipbone

    • noun large flaring bone forming one half of the pelvis; made up of the ilium and ischium and pubis
      innominate bone.

    • More ‘hipbone’ Meaning
    • hipbones Associated Words
    • hipbones Related Words
  • deboned

    • adjective satellite having had the bones removed
      boned.
      • a boneless rib roast
      • a boned (or deboned) fish
    • verb remove the bones from
      debone; bone.
      • bone the turkey before roasting it

    • More ‘deboned’ Meaning
    • deboned Associated Words
    • deboned Related Words
  • marrowbone

    • noun a bone containing edible marrow; used especially in flavoring soup

    • More ‘marrowbone’ Meaning
    • marrowbones Associated Words
    • marrowbones Related Words
  • jawbone

    • noun the jaw in vertebrates that is hinged to open the mouth
      jowl; mandible; lower jaw; submaxilla; lower jawbone; mandibula; mandibular bone.
    • verb talk idly or casually and in a friendly way
      shmoose; shmooze; schmoose; schmooze.

    • More ‘jawbone’ Meaning
    • jawbones Associated Words
    • jawbones Related Words
  • wishbone

    • noun the furcula of a domestic fowl
      wishing bone.

    • More ‘wishbone’ Meaning
    • wishbones Associated Words
    • wishbones Related Words
  • thighbone

    • noun the longest and thickest bone of the human skeleton; extends from the pelvis to the knee
      femur; femoris.

    • More ‘thighbone’ Meaning
    • thighbones Associated Words
    • thighbones Related Words
  • whalebone

    • noun a horny material from the upper jaws of certain whales; used as the ribs of fans or as stays in corsets
      baleen.

    • More ‘whalebone’ Meaning
    • whalebones Associated Words
    • whalebones Related Words
  • shinbone

    • noun the inner and thicker of the two bones of the human leg between the knee and ankle
      shin; shin bone; tibia.

    • More ‘shinbone’ Meaning
    • shinbones Associated Words
    • shinbones Related Words
  • sawbones

    • noun a physician who specializes in surgery
      surgeon; operating surgeon.

    • More ‘sawbones’ Meaning
    • sawbones Associated Words
    • sawbones Related Words
  • gabonese

    • noun a native or inhabitant of Gabon
    • adjective of or relating to Gabon or its inhabitants
      • Gabonese hills
      • Gabonese writers

    • More ‘gabonese’ Meaning
    • gabonese Idioms/Phrases
    • gabonese Associated Words
    • gabonese Related Words
  • lazybones

    • noun a lazy person

    • More ‘lazybones’ Meaning
    • lazybones Associated Words
    • lazybones Related Words
  • knucklebones

    • noun a game in which jackstones are thrown and picked up in various groups between bounces of a small rubber ball
      jackstones; jacks.

    • More ‘knucklebones’ Meaning
    • knucklebones Associated Words
    • knucklebones Related Words
  • rawboned

    • adjective satellite having a lean and bony physique
      • a rawboned cow hand

    • More ‘rawboned’ Meaning
    • rawboned Associated Words
    • rawboned Related Words




About Prefix and Suffix Words

This page lists all the words created by adding prefixes, suffixes to the word `bone`. For each word, youwill notice a blue bar below the word. The longer the blue bar below a word, the more common/popular the word. Very short blue bars indicate rare usage.

While some of the words are direct derivations of the word `bone`, some are not.

You can click on each word to see it’s meaning.

Examples from texts

Until we reached the place where it ran into the overgrowth that covered most of the Key, it was also ridged with bone-colored sand dunes that had blown inland from the beach.

И пока не нырнула в густые джунгли, занимавшие большую часть острова, её то и дело перегораживали дюны из песка цвета кости, который ветром нанесло с берега.

King, Stephen / Duma KeyКинг, Стивен / Дьюма-Ки

Дьюма-Ки

Кинг, Стивен

© Перевод В.А. Вебер, 2008

© ООО Издательство «АСТ МОСКВА», 2009

© Stephen King, 2008

Too near the bone, one might say with an ironic twist of one’s mouth.

Преисполнил до мозга костей — если, конечно, здесь уместна ирония.

Bradbury, Ray / SkeletonБрэдбери, Рэй / Скелет

Скелет

Брэдбери, Рэй

© 1955 by Ray Bradbury

© Аллунан Н., Анисимов С., Воронежская М., Жданов Л., Жданова Т., Куняева Н., Левкин А., Облонская Р., Оганян А., Пчелинцев М., Трофимов С., Шинкарь Т., перевод на русский язык, 2010

© Издание на русском языке. ООО «Издательство «Эксмо», 2010

Skeleton

Bradbury, Ray

© 1943, 1944, 1945, 1946, 1947, 1954, 1955 by Ray Bradbury

«We have a bone to chew.»

– Нам следует утрясти одно дельце.

Simak, Clifford D. / Ring Around the SunСаймак, Клиффорд Д. / Кольцо вокруг Солнца

Кольцо вокруг Солнца

Саймак, Клиффорд Д.

© 1980 by Clifford D. Simak

© Перевод. А. Григорьев, 2004

Ring Around the Sun

Simak, Clifford D.

There was a bowl of water and an old bone.

На полу стояла миска с водой и валялась старая обглоданная кость.

Rosnay, Tatiana de / Sarah’s KeyРосней, Татьяна де / Ключ Сары

Ключ Сары

Росней, Татьяна де

Sarah’s Key

Rosnay, Tatiana de

© 2007 by Tatiana de Rosnay

To prove the invention’s applicability experiments were conducted in mice to determine the sensitivity of the bone marrow cells to the impacts of various agents after introduction of the proposed agent in recommended dose.

Для доказательства соответствия изобретения условию применимости выполнены эксперименты на мышах с целью определения чувствительности к различного рода воздействий клеток костного мозга после введения препарата в оптимальных дозах.

Alendronate has been shown to significantly increase bone mineral density in women with postmenopausal osteoporosis.

Показано, что алендронат значительно повышает минеральную плотность кости у женщин с постменопаузным остеопорозом.

Anthony, Patricia / Pharmacology secretsЭнтони, Патриция / Секреты фармакологии

Секреты фармакологии

Энтони, Патриция

© 2002 by Hanley & Belfus, Inc.

© ООО «Медицинское информационное агентство». Перевод на русский язык и оформление, 2004

Pharmacology secrets

Anthony, Patricia

© 2002 by Hanley & Belfus, Inc.

There was a huge, whooshing roar followed by a guttering BANG that Clay felt in every bone of his body.

На громкий шипучий рев наложилось: «БАХ», которое Клай почувствовал каждой косточкой своего тела.

King, Stephen / CellКинг, Стивен / Мобильник

«Thou art my brother,» said Bridgenorth — «the blood and bone of my departed Saint — and I am determined that I will trust thee in this matter.»

— Ты мой брат, — сказал Бриджнорт. — В тебе течет кровь праведницы, покойной матери Алисы, и я решаюсь довериться тебе в этом деле.

Scott, Walter / Peveril of the PeakСкотт, Вальтер / Певерил Пик

Певерил Пик

Скотт, Вальтер

© Издательство «Художественная литература», 1964

Peveril of the Peak

Scott, Walter

My right hand ached deeply, all the way down to the bone.

Правая рука сильно болела.

Saintcrow, Lilith / Working for the DevilСэйнткроу, Лилит / Контракт с дьяволом

Контракт с дьяволом

Сэйнткроу, Лилит

© 2005 by Lilith Saintcrow

© Перевод, С. Теремязева, 2009

© Издание на руском языке, ООО «Издательство «Эксмо», 2009

Working for the Devil

Saintcrow, Lilith

© 2005 by Lilith Saintcrow

The dark blade of the Sword of Leah lifted and swept downward in a glittering arc, cutting deep into the neck and shoulders of the Jachyra, driven by the force of magic, tearing through muscle and bone.

Сверкающей молнией взметнулся меч Ли — меч, движимый колдовской силой, — и с сокрушительной мощью обрушился прямо на шею и плечи Джахира, разрубая и мышцы и кость.

Brooks, Terry / The Wishsong of ShannaraБрукс, Терри / Песнь Шаннары

Песнь Шаннары

Брукс, Терри

The Wishsong of Shannara

Brooks, Terry

© 1985 by Terrence D. Brooks

We were outside now, booted feet crunching in glass, the wild rain pounding on both of us, soaked to the bone and suddenly chill, breath steaming, sparks flying like water as we danced.

Мы сражаемся уже во дворе, под ногами хрустит битое стекло, с неба льются потоки воды, мы оба промокли до костей и замерзли, мы тяжело дышим, вокруг нас вспыхивают искры, которые разлетаются от нашего дикого танца, как водяные брызги.

Saintcrow, Lilith / Working for the DevilСэйнткроу, Лилит / Контракт с дьяволом

Контракт с дьяволом

Сэйнткроу, Лилит

© 2005 by Lilith Saintcrow

© Перевод, С. Теремязева, 2009

© Издание на руском языке, ООО «Издательство «Эксмо», 2009

Working for the Devil

Saintcrow, Lilith

© 2005 by Lilith Saintcrow

I was too busy to study my sociology, let alone to bone up on US foreign policy.

Не хватало, чтобы заняться социологией, а уж тем более на препирательства об иностранной политике США.

King, Stephen / Hearts in AtlantisКинг, Стивен / Сердца в Атлантиде

Сердца в Атлантиде

Кинг, Стивен

© Stephen King, 1999

© Перевод И.Гурова, 2000

© ООО «Издательство АСТ», 2001

Hearts in Atlantis

King, Stephen

«By heavens!» answered Zuchin as he sucked the marrow out of a mutton bone (I remember thinking that it must be because he ate marrow that he was so clever).

— Небось, — отвечал Зухин, высасывая мозг из бараньей кости (я помню, в это время я думал: от этого-то он так умен, что ест много мозгу).

Толстой, Л.Н. / ЮностьTolstoy, Leo / Youth

Юность

Толстой, Л.Н.

© Издательство «Правда», 1987

The bone, the skin, the hairs, the small white scar on the point of the elbow, won from the corner of a storage heater at GateshillPrimary School — they all belong to me.

Кость, кожа, волоски, белый шрамик на локте – память о встрече с раскаленным обогревателем в гейтсхиллской начальной школе, – все это принадлежит не кому-нибудь, а мне.

Laurie, Hugh / The Gun SellerЛори, Хью / Торговец пушками

Торговец пушками

Лори, Хью

© Александр Рахуба, перевод, 2009

© «Фантом Пресс», издание, 2009

© Hugh Laurie, The Gun Seller, 1996

The Gun Seller

Laurie, Hugh

«I don’t like anything here at all»- said Frodo, «step or stone, breath or bone.

— Да мне здесь все не нравится, — сказал Фродо, — ни ветры, ни камни, ни тропки, ни реки.

Tolkien, John Ronald Reuel / The Two TowersТолкиен, Джон Рональд Руэл / Две Крепости

Две Крепости

Толкиен, Джон Рональд Руэл

© Издательство «Радуга», 1988

The Two Towers

Tolkien, John Ronald Reuel

© 1954, 1965, 1966 by J.R.R. Tolkien

© renewed 1982 by Christopher R. Tolkien, Michael H.R. Tolkien, John F.R. Tolkien and Priscilla M.A.R. Tolkien

© 1988 by J. R. R. Tolkien

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bone1/20

bəunNounкостьExamples

to break / fracture a bone — сломать кость

User translations

Noun

Verb

  1. 1.

    совершать половой акт кем-либо)

  2. 2.

    перепихнуться, переспать

    translation added by Dron N

The part of speech is not specified

Collocations

acetabular bone

кость вертлужной впадины

acromial bone

акромиальная кость

air-bone gap

костно-воздушный интервал

alar bone

клиновидная кость

alveolar bone

альвеолярный отросток

aneurysmal bone cyst

аневризматическая киста кости

aneurysmal bone cyst

доброкачественная костная аневризма

aneurysmal bone cyst

простая киста кости

aneurysmal bone cyst

солитарная киста кости

articular tubercle of temporal bone

суставной бугорок височной кости

attachment of implant to bone

фиксация имплантата к кости

autogenous bone

костный аутотрансплантат

back bone

позвоночный столб

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This shows grade level based on the word’s complexity.

This shows grade level based on the word’s complexity.


noun

Anatomy, Zoology.

  1. one of the structures composing the skeleton of a vertebrate.
  2. the hard connective tissue forming the substance of the skeleton of most vertebrates, composed of a collagen-rich organic matrix impregnated with calcium, phosphate, and other minerals.

such a structure from an edible animal, usually with meat adhering to it, as an article of food: Pea soup should be made with a ham bone.

any of various similarly hard or structural animal substances, as ivory or whalebone.

something made of or resembling such a substance.

a small concession, intended to pacify or quiet; a conciliatory bribe or gift: The administration threw the student protesters a couple of bones, but refused to make any basic changes in the curriculum or requirements.

bones,

  1. the skeleton.
  2. a body: Let his bones rest in peace.
  3. Games Slang. dice.
  4. (initial capital letter) Mr. Bones.
  5. a simple rhythm instrument consisting of two sometimes curved bars or short strips of bone, ivory, wood, or the like, held between the fingers of one hand and clacked together.

the color of bone; ivory or off-white.

a flat strip of whalebone or other material for stiffening corsets, petticoats, etc.; stay.

Games Slang. a domino.

verb (used with object), boned, bon·ing.

to remove the bones from: to bone a turkey.

to put whalebone or another stiffener into (clothing).

Slang: Vulgar. to have sexual intercourse with: He was boning his best friend’s wife!

Agriculture. to put bone meal into (feed, fertilizer, etc.).

adverb

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Idioms about bone

    bone up, Informal. to study intensely; cram: We’re going to have to bone up for the exam.

    feel in one’s bones, to think or feel intuitively: She felt in her bones that it was going to be a momentous day.

    have a bone to pick with someone, to have cause to disagree or argue with someone: The teacher had a bone to pick with him because his homework paper was identical with his neighbor’s.

    make no bones about,

    1. to deal with in a direct manner; act or speak openly: He makes no bones about his dislike of modern music.
    2. to have no fear of or objection to.

    to the bone,

    1. to the essentials; to the minimum: The government cut social service programs to the bone.
    2. to an extreme degree; thoroughly: chilled to the bone.

Origin of bone

First recorded before 900; Middle English bo(o)n, Old English bān; cognate with Old Frisian, Old Saxon bēn, Dutch been “bone,” Old Norse bein “bone, leg,” German Bein “leg”; from Germanic bainam

Words nearby bone

bondstone, bondswoman, bonduc, bond washing, bondwoman, bone, bone ash, bone bed, boneblack, bone cell, bone china

Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023

Words related to bone

How to use bone in a sentence

  • The $1,500 Embody Gaming Chair has the bones of an office chair.

  • After too long in microgravity, our muscles and bones become weak.

  • The man’s bones had previously been found in the Newgrange passage tomb, an earthen mound covering more than 4,000 square meters near the River Boyne.

  • Archaeologist Ryan Rabett of Queen’s University Belfast in Northern Ireland calls the new study of Sri Lankan bone points “suggestive but not definitive” evidence of bow-and-arrow hunting.

  • The tooth and six bone fragments are more than 40,000 years old.

  • Not long after I was finally diagnosed, my doctor ordered a bone density scan.

  • Later studies showed that only gaining weight and the return of natural menstruation help improve bone density.

  • My doctor put me on oral contraceptives to induce a period, figuring it would help build bone.

  • This leaves people with a history of anorexia and reduced bone density like me at high risk for fractures.

  • An x-ray two hours later confirms my hunch: my tibia (the big bone behind the shin) is snapped clean in two.

  • I saw this girl, eight or nine years old, all benumbed and nothing but skin and bone.

  • Large mononuclear leukocytes probably originate in the bone-marrow or spleen.

  • That we will, and you never need want, Mark, for I’ve many a fine bone buried away against old age and rainy weather.

  • Myelocytes are the bone-marrow cells from which the corresponding granular leukocytes are developed.

  • Polymorphonuclear leukocytes are formed in the bone-marrow from neutrophilic myelocytes.

British Dictionary definitions for bone (1 of 2)


noun

any of the various structures that make up the skeleton in most vertebrates

the porous rigid tissue of which these parts are made, consisting of a matrix of collagen and inorganic salts, esp calcium phosphate, interspersed with canals and small holesRelated adjectives: osseous, osteal

something consisting of bone or a bonelike substance

(plural) the human skeleton or bodythey laid his bones to rest; come and rest your bones

a thin strip of whalebone, light metal, plastic, etc, used to stiffen corsets and brassieres

(plural) the essentials (esp in the phrase the bare bones)to explain the bones of a situation

(plural) dice

(plural) an informal nickname for a doctor

close to the bone or near the bone

  1. risqué or indecenthis jokes are rather close to the bone
  2. in poverty; destitute

feel in one’s bones to have an intuition of

have a bone to pick to have grounds for a quarrel

make no bones about

  1. to be direct and candid about
  2. to have no scruples about

point the bone (often foll by at) Australian

  1. to wish bad luck (on)
  2. to threaten to bring about the downfall (of)

verb (mainly tr)

to remove the bones from (meat for cooking, etc)

to stiffen (a corset, etc) by inserting bones

to fertilize with bone meal

taboo, slang to have sexual intercourse with

British a slang word for steal

Derived forms of bone

boneless, adjective

Word Origin for bone

Old English bān; related to Old Norse béin, Old Frisian bēn, Old High German bein

British Dictionary definitions for bone (2 of 2)

Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition
© William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins
Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

Scientific definitions for bone


The hard, dense, calcified tissue that forms the skeleton of most vertebrates, consisting of a matrix made up of collagen fibers and mineral salts. There are two main types of bone structure: compact, which is solid and hard, and cancellous, which is spongy in appearance. Bone serves as a framework for the attachment of muscles and protects vital organs, such as the brain, heart, and lungs. See more at osteoblast osteocyte.

Any of the structures made of bone that constitute a skeleton, such as the femur. The human skeleton consists of 206 bones.

The American Heritage® Science Dictionary
Copyright © 2011. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

Other Idioms and Phrases with bone


In addition to the idioms beginning with bone

  • bone of contention
  • bone to pick, have a
  • bone up

also see:

  • bare bones
  • chilled to the bone
  • cut to the bone
  • feel in one’s bones
  • funny bone
  • make no bones about
  • pull a boner
  • roll the bones
  • skin and bones
  • work one’s fingers to the bone

The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary
Copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.

English[edit]

Pronunciation[edit]

  • (General American) enPR: bōn, IPA(key): /ˈboʊn/
  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /bəʊn/
  • (General Australian) IPA(key): /bəʉn/
  • (New Zealand) IPA(key): /bɐʉn/
  • Rhymes: -əʊn

Etymology 1[edit]

From Middle English bon, from Old English bān (bone, tusk; the bone of a limb), from Proto-Germanic *bainą (bone), from *bainaz (straight), from Proto-Indo-European *bʰeyh₂- (to hit, strike, beat).

Cognate with Scots bane, been, bean, bein, bain (bone), North Frisian bien (bone), West Frisian bien (bone), Dutch been (bone; leg), German Low German Been, Bein (bone), German Bein (leg), German Gebein (bones), Swedish ben (bone; leg), Norwegian and Icelandic bein (bone), Breton benañ (to cut, hew), Latin perfinēs (break through, break into pieces, shatter), Avestan 𐬠𐬫𐬈𐬥𐬙𐬈(byente, they fight, hit). Related also to Old Norse beinn (straight, right, favourable, advantageous, convenient, friendly, fair, keen) (whence Middle English bain, bayne, bayn, beyn (direct, prompt), Scots bein, bien (in good condition, pleasant, well-to-do, cosy, well-stocked, pleasant, keen)), Icelandic beinn (straight, direct, hospitable), Norwegian bein (straight, direct, easy to deal with). See bain, bein.

Alternative forms[edit]

  • bane, byen (dialectal)

Noun[edit]

A bone.

bone (countable and uncountable, plural bones)

  1. (uncountable) A composite material consisting largely of calcium phosphate and collagen and making up the skeleton of most vertebrates.
    • a1420, The British Museum Additional MS, 12,056, “Wounds complicated by the Dislocation of a Bone”, in Robert von Fleischhacker, editor, Lanfranc’s «Science of cirurgie.»[1], London: K. Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co, translation of original by Lanfranc of Milan, published 1894, →ISBN, page 63:

      Ne take noon hede to brynge togidere þe parties of þe boon þat is to-broken or dislocate, til viij. daies ben goon in þe wyntir, & v. in þe somer; for þanne it schal make quytture, and be sikir from swellynge; & þanne brynge togidere þe brynkis eiþer þe disiuncture after þe techynge þat schal be seid in þe chapitle of algebra.

  2. (countable) Any of the components of an endoskeleton, made of bone.
    • c. 1599–1602 (date written), William Shakespeare, “The Tragedie of Hamlet, Prince of Denmarke”, in Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies [] (First Folio), London: [] Isaac Iaggard, and Ed[ward] Blount, published 1623, →OCLC, [Act IV, scene v], page 275, column 1:

      No Trophee, Sword, nor Hatchment o’re his bones.

  3. A bone of a fish; a fishbone.
  4. A bonefish
    • 2019: «Tres Bocas» by Scott Sadil, California Fly Fisher
      The reason I rarely fish for Mag Bay bones with a 5-weight or 6-weight is the number of fish that can turn light stuff inside out.
  5. One of the rigid parts of a corset that forms its frame, the boning, originally made of whalebone.
  6. One of the fragments of bone held between the fingers of the hand and rattled together to keep time to music.
  7. Anything made of bone, such as a bobbin for weaving bone lace.
  8. (figurative) The framework of anything.
  9. An off-white colour, like the colour of bone.

    bone:  

  10. (US, informal) A dollar.
  11. (American football, informal) The wishbone formation.
  12. (slang) An erect penis; a boner.
  13. (slang, chiefly in the plural) A domino or dice.
    • 1899 (please specify the page), Joseph Conrad, “The Heart of Darkness”, in Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine, volume CLXV, New York, N.Y.: The Leonard Scott Publishing Company, [], →OCLC, part:

      The Accountant had brought out already a box of dominoes, and was toying architecturally with the bones.

  14. (slang) A cannabis cigarette; a joint.
    • 2006, Sean Conway, Gillis Huckabee (page 140)
      In between sets I took her outside, sat against a fence near the dumpster, and smoked a bone with her.
  15. (figurative) A reward.
    • 1979, Pink Floyd, Nobody Home
      When I’m a good dog they sometimes throw me a bone in
Synonyms[edit]
  • os (rare)
  • (rigid parts of a corset): rib, stay
  • (reward): doggy treat
Hypernyms[edit]
  • skeleton
Hyponyms[edit]
  • aitch-bone
  • aitchbone
  • alveolar bone
  • arm bone
  • armbone
  • auditory bone
  • back-bone
  • backbone
  • barebone
  • bone age
  • bone apple tea
  • bone black
  • bone dry
  • bone folder
  • bone graft
  • bone head
  • bone idle
  • bone in one’s body
  • bone oil
  • bone seeker
  • bone spur
  • bone tired
  • bone-ash
  • bone-fire
  • bone-hard
  • bone-in
  • bone-meal
  • bone-mouth
  • bone-on
  • bone-seeker
  • bone-shaker
  • bone-tired
  • breast bone
  • breastbone
  • calf bone
  • cannon bone
  • canon bone
  • capitate bone
  • carpal bone
  • cheek bone
  • cheek-bone
  • cheekbone
  • chevron bone
  • chill to the bone
  • coffin bone
  • collar bone
  • collar-bone
  • collarbone
  • cramp bone
  • crazy bone
  • cuboid bone
  • cuboidal bone
  • cuneiform bone
  • cuttlebone
  • cuttlefish bone
  • dentary bone
  • dermal bone
  • dog bone
  • dragonbone
  • dry bone
  • earbone
  • elbow bone
  • epipubic bone
  • ethmoid bone
  • exercise bone
  • falling off the bone
  • featherbone
  • fingerbone
  • fishbone
  • flesh and bone
  • folding bone
  • folding-bone
  • footbone
  • forearm bone
  • frontal bone
  • funny bone
  • glass bone disease
  • H bone
  • hamate bone
  • haunch bone
  • heel bone
  • herring-bone
  • herringbone
  • hip bone
  • huckle bone
  • hyoid bone
  • incisive bone
  • innominate bone
  • intermediate cuneiform bone
  • Ishango bone
  • jaw bone
  • jaw-bone
  • jawbone
  • knucklebone
  • lachrymal bone
  • lacrimal bone
  • lateral cuneiform bone
  • legbone
  • like a bulldog with a bone
  • lingual bone
  • long bone
  • lunate bone
  • malar bone
  • marrowbone
  • marsupial bone
  • mastoid bone
  • medial cuneiform bone
  • membrane bone
  • membrane-bone
  • metacarpal bone
  • Murphy-Lane bone skid
  • nasal bone
  • navicular bone
  • neckbone
  • occipital bone
  • oracle bone
  • otic bone
  • palatine bone
  • parietal bone
  • pedal bone
  • penile bone
  • penis bone
  • pin bone
  • pisiform bone
  • pizza bone
  • plate bone
  • pneumatic bone
  • point the bone
  • pull bone
  • pulley bone
  • quadrate bone
  • radial bone
  • rag-and-bone man
  • rag-and-bone shop
  • rider’s bone
  • ridge-bone
  • ridgebone
  • romancing the bone
  • roofing bone
  • rostral bone
  • ruel-bone
  • scaphoid bone
  • semilunar bone
  • sesamoid bone
  • shinbone
  • shoulder bone
  • sit bone
  • skullbone
  • soup bone
  • speal-bone
  • sphenoid bone
  • splenial bone
  • splint bone
  • splinter bone
  • spoke-bone
  • stirrup bone
  • T-bone
  • t-bone
  • tail bone
  • tailbone
  • tarsal bone
  • tau bone
  • temporal bone
  • throw someone a bone
  • Tilly bone
  • to one’s bone
  • tongue bone
  • toss a bone to
  • toss them a bone
  • trapezium bone
  • trapezoid bone
  • triquetral bone
  • triquetrum bone
  • turbinate bone
  • twitter-bone
  • tympanic bone
  • vomer bone
  • what’s bred in the bone will come out in the flesh
  • wishbone
  • wishing bone
  • Wormian bone
  • wristbone
  • yellow bone
  • zygomatic bone
Derived terms[edit]
  • all skin and bones
  • bad to the bone
  • bag of bones
  • bare-bones
  • bone ash
  • bone china
  • bone density
  • bone earth
  • bone fire
  • bone hard
  • bone in her teeth
  • bone in the throat
  • bone lace
  • bone loss
  • bone marrow
  • bone mass
  • bone meal
  • bone morphogenetic protein
  • bone of contention
  • bone scan
  • bone spavin
  • bone structure
  • bone tissue
  • bone to pick
  • bone turquoise
  • bone up
  • bone wax
  • bone-chilling
  • bone-cruncher
  • bone-crunching
  • bone-deep
  • bone-dry
  • bone-eating snot flower worm
  • bone-grubber
  • bone-house wasp
  • bone-idle
  • bone-shaking
  • bone-shakingly
  • bonebed
  • boneblack
  • boned
  • bonedigger
  • bonefish
  • bonefolder
  • bonehead
  • boneheaded
  • boneheadedly
  • boneheadedness
  • boneless
  • bonelessness
  • bonelet
  • boner
  • boneseeker
  • bonesetter
  • boneshaker
  • Bonesman
  • boneyard
  • bony
  • break-bones
  • bred-in-the-bone
  • breed in the bone
  • brittle bone disease
  • chew the meat and spit out the bones
  • close to the bone
  • crossbones
  • dog and bone
  • dog bone spanner
  • dog bone wrench
  • dry as a bone
  • flesh and bones
  • God’s bones
  • have a bone in one’s leg
  • have a bone to pick
  • in one’s bones
  • jump one’s bones
  • keep one’s bone green
  • lazy bones
  • like a dog with a bone
  • lucky-bone
  • make no bones about
  • make old bones
  • make one’s bones
  • meat on the bones
  • Napier’s bones
  • near the bone
  • no bones about it
  • oracle bone script
  • phantom bone disease
  • rag and bone man
  • rag and bone shop
  • rattle the bones
  • rickle of bones
  • ring-bone
  • sawbones
  • skin and bone
  • skin and bones
  • skull and bones
  • soaked to the bone
  • soaked to the bones
  • St. Hugh’s bones
  • sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never hurt me
  • T-bone steak
  • throw a bone to
  • tickle someone’s funny bone
  • to one’s bones
  • to the bone
  • to the bones
  • whirl-bone
  • with every bone in one’s body
  • work one’s fingers to the bone
Translations[edit]

Adjective[edit]

bone (not comparable)

  1. Of an off-white colour, like the colour of bone.

Verb[edit]

bone (third-person singular simple present bones, present participle boning, simple past and past participle boned)

  1. To prepare (meat, etc) by removing the bone or bones from.
    Synonyms: debone, unbone
    • 1949, Kenneth Lewis Roberts, I Wanted to Write[2], page 44:

      One of the fish stalls specialized in boning shad, and he who has never eaten a boned shad baked twenty minutes on a hot oak plank has been deprived of the most delicious morsel that the ocean yields.

    • 1977, Prosper Montagné, Charlotte Snyder Turgeon, The New Larousse Gastronomique[3], page 73:

      The ballottine is made of a piece of meat, fowl, game or fish which is boned, stuffed, and rolled into the shape of a bundle. The term ballottine should strictly apply only to meat, boned and rolled, but not stuffed.

    • 2009, Maguelonne Toussaint-Samat, A History of Food[4], page 379:

      Then it is boned; keeping the bone in during cooking improves the flavour and enriches the meat with calcium.

    • 2011, Aliza Green, Steve Legato, The Fishmonger’s Apprentice[5], page 38:

      Other fish suited to boning through the back include small bluefish, Arctic char, steelhead salmon, salmon, small wild striped bass, hybrid striped bass, Whitefish, drum, trout, and sea trout.

  2. To fertilize with bone.
    • 1859 July 9, The Economist[6], page 758:

      He cites an instance of land heavily boned 70 years ago as “still markedly luxuriant beyond any other grass land in the same district.”

  3. To put whalebone into.
    • 1871, Figure-Training:

      Having my stays very fully boned and fitted with shoulder-straps.

  4. (civil engineering) To make level, using a particular procedure; to survey a level line.
  5. (vulgar, slang, usually of a man, transitive, intransitive) To have sexual intercourse (with).
    Synonyms: see Thesaurus:copulate, Thesaurus:copulate with
    Related terms: boned, boner
    • 1993, “Back Seat (of My Jeep)”, in 14 Shots to the Dome, performed by LL Cool J:

      We’re bonin on the dark blocks / Wearin’ out the shocks, wettin’ up the dashboard clock

    • 2006, Masta Ace (lyrics), “Sick of it all”, in Pariah:

      [] These cats stay rapping about cars they don’t own / I am sick of rappers bragging about models they don’t bone

    • 2007, Stacey Deddo, The Elimination Special, Part II: The Elimination (Drawn Together), season 3, episode 14, Comedy Central, spoken by The Jew Producer (James Arnold Taylor):

      When we return we’ll find out which one of our six remaining contestants’ dreams will be totally ruined, like your mom’s reputation after I bone her face.

    • 2007, Reno Mounties (Reno 911!), season 4, episode 11, Comedy Central, spoken by Deputy Cherisha Kimball (Mary Birdsong):

      I swear on the good book that if you pull through, I will bone Travis Junior.

  6. (Australia, dated, in Aboriginal culture) To perform «bone pointing», a ritual that is intended to bring illness or even death to the victim.
    • 1962, Arthur Upfield, The Will of the Tribe, Collier Books, page 48:

      «You don’t know!», Bony echoed. «You can tell me who boned me fifteen years ago on the other side of the world, and you can’t tell me who killed the white-fella in the Crater».

  7. (usually with «up») To study.
    • 1896, Burt L. Standish, Frank Merriwell’s Chums:

      «I know it. You do not study.» «What’s the use of boning all the time! I wasn’t cut out for it.»

  8. To polish boots to a shiny finish.
    • c. 1980,, F. van Zy, SADF National Service (1979-1980)[7]:

      [] the permanent boning (excessive polishing) of boots by recruits []

  9. To nag, especially for an unpaid debt.
    • 1950, Asphalt Jungle:

      Dix Handley: Don’t bone me!
      Cobby: Now look, I’m not boning you, Dix—
      Dix: Did I ever welsh?
      Cobby: Nobody said you did—
      Dix: You just boned me!

Derived terms[edit]
  • bonable
  • boning
  • boning rod
  • debone
  • unbone
Translations[edit]

to remove bones

  • Bulgarian: обезкостявам (obezkostjavam)
  • Catalan: desossar (ca)
  • Chinese:
    Cantonese: 起骨 (hei2 gwat1)
    Mandarin: 去骨 (qùgǔ), 剔骨 (tīgǔ)
  • Finnish: poistaa luut
  • French: désosser (fr)
  • German: entbeinen (de), ausbeinen (de)
  • Greek: ξεκοκαλίζω (el) (xekokalízo)
  • Hungarian: kicsontoz
  • Ido: desostizar (io)
  • Italian: disossare (it)
  • Latin: exossō
  • Macedonian: вади коски (vadi koski)
  • Maori: kōhurehure, kokoki, mākiri (refers specifically to poultry)), kōhaha (refers to fish)
  • Portuguese: desossar (pt)
  • Russian: снима́ть мясо с костей (snimátʹ mjaso s kostej)
  • Slovak: odkostiť
  • Spanish: deshuesar (es) (meat), quitar las espinas (fish)
  • Swedish: bena ur (fish)
  • Turkish: kılçık temizlemek (fish)
  • Vietnamese: gỡ xương
  • Zazaki: zela weçinen

slang: have sexual intercourse with

  • Finnish: naida (fi), nussia (fi)
  • French: fourrer (fr), emmancher (fr), tirer sa crampe (fr), forniquer (fr), s’envoyer en l’air (fr)
  • German: ficken (de), bumsen (de), vögeln (de), poppen (de), nageln (de)
  • Hebrew: זיין(ziyén), דפק (he) (dafák)
  • Italian: fottere (it), scopare (it), chiavare (it)
  • Norwegian: pule (no), knulle (no)
  • Portuguese: transar (pt), foder (pt), comer (pt)
  • Slovak: pichať
  • Spanish: joder (es) con, (Spain) follar (es) con, (Mexico) coger (es) con, culear (es) (Chile), tirarse (es) a (Spain)
  • Turkish: sikişmek (tr)

See also[edit]

  • Appendix:Bones

Further reading[edit]

  • Wikipedia list of bones in the human skeleton

Etymology 2[edit]

Unknown; probably related in some way to Etymology 1, above.

Verb[edit]

bone (third-person singular simple present bones, present participle boning, simple past and past participle boned)

  1. (transitive, slang) To apprehend, steal.
    • 1839, Charles Dickens, Nicholas Nickleby[8], page 127:

      “Did I?” said Squeers, “Well it was rather a startling thing for a stranger to come and recommend himself by saying that he knew all about you, and what your name was, and why you were living so quiet here, and what you had boned, and who you had boned it from.”

    • 1915, William Roscoe Thayer, The Life and Letters of John Hay:

      [] as long as you and I live I take it for granted that you will not suspect me of boning them. But to guard against casualties hereafter, I have asked Nicolay to write you a line saying that I have never had in my possession or custody any of the papers which you entrusted to him.

    • 1936, J.R.R. Tolkien, “The Root of the Boot”, in Songs for the Philologists:

      But troll’s old seat is much the same,
      And the bone he boned from its owner

    • 1942, Rebecca West, Black Lamb and Grey Falcon, Canongate, published 2006, page 802:

      Therefore she wants to take results that belong to other people: she wants to bone everybody else’s loaf.

Etymology 3[edit]

Borrowed from French bornoyer to look at with one eye, to sight, from borgne one-eyed.

Verb[edit]

bone (third-person singular simple present bones, present participle boning, simple past and past participle boned)

  1. (carpentry, masonry, surveying) To sight along an object or set of objects to check whether they are level or in line[1].
    • 1846, W. M. Buchanan, A Technological Dictionary[9], page 151:

      Joiners, &c., bone their work with two straight edges.

Etymology 4[edit]

Clipping of trombone

Noun[edit]

bone (plural bones)

  1. (slang) Clipping of trombone.

References[edit]

  1. ^ 1874, Edward H. Knight, American Mechanical Dictionary

Anagrams[edit]

  • Beno, Boen, ebon

Afrikaans[edit]

Noun[edit]

bone

  1. plural of boon

Danish[edit]

Etymology 1[edit]

From Low German and Middle Low German bōnen, from Old Saxon *bōnian, from Proto-West Germanic *bōnijan (to polish).

Pronunciation[edit]

  • IPA(key): [ˈb̥oːnə]

Verb[edit]

bone (imperative bon, infinitive at bone, present tense boner, past tense bonede, perfect tense har bonet)

  1. to polish

Etymology 2[edit]

Derived from the noun bon (receipt), from French bon (voucher, ticket).

Pronunciation[edit]

  • IPA(key): [ˈb̥ʌŋə]

Verb[edit]

bone (imperative bon, infinitive at bone, present tense boner, past tense bonede, perfect tense har bonet)

  1. to enter (in the cash register)
  2. to charge

Esperanto[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From bona (good) +‎ -e.

Pronunciation[edit]

  • IPA(key): /ˈbo.ne/
  • Hyphenation: bon‧e
  • Rhymes: -one

Adverb[edit]

bone

  1. well, OK

Hadza[edit]

Alternative forms[edit]

  • bune

Etymology[edit]

Borrowed from Sukuma βũne (four (class XIV)).

Pronunciation[edit]

  • IPA(key): /bone/

Adjective[edit]

bone m (masc. plural bunibii, fem. boneko, fem. plural bonebee)

  1. four

Ido[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From Esperanto bone (well), bona (good) +‎ -e.

Pronunciation[edit]

  • IPA(key): /ˈbone/

Adverb[edit]

bone

  1. well
    • 2008, Margrit Kennedy, Pekunio sen interesti ed inflaciono, tr. by Alfred Neussner of Interest and Inflation Free Money, page 50:
      To pruvas maxim bone nia bonstando, se ica sumo distributesus nur proxime pro-porcionale.

      This would have served well as a proof of our prosperity if it were evenly distributed. (Original English, page 29)

[edit]

  • bona

Italian[edit]

Adjective[edit]

bone

  1. feminine plural of bono

Latin[edit]

Adjective[edit]

bone

  1. vocative masculine singular of bonus

References[edit]

  • bone”, in Charlton T. Lewis and Charles Short (1879) A Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press
  • bone in Gaffiot, Félix (1934) Dictionnaire illustré latin-français, Hachette
  • bone”, in Richard Stillwell et al., editor (1976) The Princeton Encyclopedia of Classical Sites, Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press

Lindu[edit]

Noun[edit]

bone

  1. sand

Middle Dutch[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From Old Dutch *bōna, from Proto-West Germanic *baunu.

Noun[edit]

bône f

  1. bean

Inflection[edit]

This noun needs an inflection-table template.

Descendants[edit]

  • Dutch: boon
    • Afrikaans: boon
      • Xhosa: imbotyi (from the diminutive)
    • Berbice Creole Dutch: bono
    • Negerhollands: bontśi, boontje, boonschi (from the diminutive)
      • Virgin Islands Creole: bontsi (archaic)
    • Caribbean Javanese: bontyis (from the diminutive plural)
    • Indonesian: buncis (from the diminutive plural)
      • Petjo: bontjies, boontjies
    • Javanese: buncis (from the diminutive plural)
    • Papiamentu: bonchi, boontsje (from the diminutive)
    • Sranan Tongo: bonki (from the diminutive)
      • Caribbean Hindustani: bongki
  • Limburgish: boean

Further reading[edit]

  • “bone”, in Vroegmiddelnederlands Woordenboek, 2000
  • Verwijs, E.; Verdam, J. (1885–1929), “bone”, in Middelnederlandsch Woordenboek, The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff, →ISBN

Middle English[edit]

Etymology 1[edit]

Noun[edit]

bone

  1. Alternative form of bane

Etymology 2[edit]

Noun[edit]

bone (plural bones)

  1. Alternative form of bon

Etymology 3[edit]

Noun[edit]

bone

  1. Alternative form of boon

Etymology 4[edit]

Adjective[edit]

bone

  1. Alternative form of boon

Etymology 5[edit]

Adjective[edit]

bone

  1. Alternative form of boun

Northern Sami[edit]

Pronunciation[edit]

  • (Kautokeino) IPA(key): /ˈpone/

Verb[edit]

bone

  1. inflection of botnit:
    1. present indicative connegative
    2. second-person singular imperative
    3. imperative connegative

Old French[edit]

Pronunciation[edit]

  • IPA(key): /ˈbu.nə/

Adjective[edit]

bone

  1. nominative feminine singular of bon
  2. oblique feminine singular of bon

Turkish[edit]

Bir yüzme yarışı sırasında sporcunun taktığı bone.

Etymology[edit]

From French bonnet.

Pronunciation[edit]

  • IPA(key): /bo.ˈne/
  • Hyphenation: bo‧ne

Noun[edit]

bone (definite accusative boneyi, plural boneler)

  1. (kıyafetler) bathing cap, swim cap, swimming cap.

    Yüzücünün yarışta taktığı bone çıktı.

    The swimming cap that the swimmer wore during the race came off.
    (please add an English translation of this usage example)

Declension[edit]

Inflection
Nominative bone
Definite accusative boneyi
Singular Plural
Nominative bone boneler
Definite accusative boneyi boneleri
Dative boneye bonelere
Locative bonede bonelerde
Ablative boneden bonelerden
Genitive bonenin bonelerin
Possessive forms
Nominative
Singular Plural
1st singular bonem bonelerim
2nd singular bonen bonelerin
3rd singular bonesi boneleri
1st plural bonemiz bonelerimiz
2nd plural boneniz boneleriniz
3rd plural boneleri boneleri
Definite accusative
Singular Plural
1st singular bonemi bonelerimi
2nd singular boneni bonelerini
3rd singular bonesini bonelerini
1st plural bonemizi bonelerimizi
2nd plural bonenizi bonelerinizi
3rd plural bonelerini bonelerini
Dative
Singular Plural
1st singular boneme bonelerime
2nd singular bonene bonelerine
3rd singular bonesine bonelerine
1st plural bonemize bonelerimize
2nd plural bonenize bonelerinize
3rd plural bonelerine bonelerine
Locative
Singular Plural
1st singular bonemde bonelerimde
2nd singular bonende bonelerinde
3rd singular bonesinde bonelerinde
1st plural bonemizde bonelerimizde
2nd plural bonenizde bonelerinizde
3rd plural bonelerinde bonelerinde
Ablative
Singular Plural
1st singular bonemden bonelerimden
2nd singular bonenden bonelerinden
3rd singular bonesinden bonelerinden
1st plural bonemizden bonelerimizden
2nd plural bonenizden bonelerinizden
3rd plural bonelerinden bonelerinden
Genitive
Singular Plural
1st singular bonemin bonelerimin
2nd singular bonenin bonelerinin
3rd singular bonesinin bonelerinin
1st plural bonemizin bonelerimizin
2nd plural bonenizin bonelerinizin
3rd plural bonelerinin bonelerinin
Predicative forms
Singular Plural
1st singular boneyim bonelerim
2nd singular bonesin bonelersin
3rd singular bone
bonedir
boneler
bonelerdir
1st plural boneyiz boneleriz
2nd plural bonesiniz bonelersiniz
3rd plural boneler bonelerdir

Further reading[edit]

  • bone on the Turkish Wikipedia.Wikipedia tr

Venetian[edit]

Adjective[edit]

bone

  1. feminine plural of bon

bone

 (bōn)

n.

1.

a. The dense, semirigid, porous, calcified connective tissue forming the major portion of the skeleton of most vertebrates. It consists of a dense organic matrix and an inorganic, mineral component.

b. Any of numerous anatomically distinct structures making up the skeleton of a vertebrate animal. There are more than 200 different bones in the human body.

c. A piece of bone.

2. bones

a. The skeleton.

b. The body: These old bones don’t do much dancing anymore.

c. Mortal remains: His bones are buried up on the hill.

3. An animal structure or material, such as ivory, resembling bone.

4. Something made of bone or of material resembling bone, especially:

a. A piece of whalebone or similar material used as a corset stay.

b. bones Informal Dice.

5. bones The fundamental plan or design, as of the plot of a book.

6.

a. bones Flat clappers made of bone or wood originally used by the end man in a minstrel show.

b. Bones(used with a sing. verb) The end man in a minstrel show.

7. Vulgar Slang The penis.

v. boned, bon·ing, bones

v.tr.

1. To remove the bones from: bone a fish.

2. To stiffen (a piece of clothing) with stays, as of whalebone.

3. Vulgar Slang To have sexual intercourse with. Used especially of a man.

v.intr.

Vulgar Slang To have sexual intercourse.

Phrasal Verb:

bone up

Informal To study, often in preparation for an anticipated event: boned up for the final exam.

Idioms:

bone of contention

The subject of a dispute.

bone to pick

Grounds for a complaint or dispute.

in (one’s) bones

In one’s innermost feelings: knew in my bones that I was wrong.

to the bone

To an extreme degree: was chilled to the bone; cut the budget to the bone.


[Middle English bon, from Old English bān.]

American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

bone

(bəʊn)

n

1. (Anatomy) any of the various structures that make up the skeleton in most vertebrates

2. (Anatomy) the porous rigid tissue of which these parts are made, consisting of a matrix of collagen and inorganic salts, esp calcium phosphate, interspersed with canals and small holes.

3. something consisting of bone or a bonelike substance

4. (plural) the human skeleton or body: they laid his bones to rest; come and rest your bones.

5. (Clothing & Fashion) a thin strip of whalebone, light metal, plastic, etc, used to stiffen corsets and brassieres

6. (plural) the essentials (esp in the phrase the bare bones): to explain the bones of a situation.

7. (plural) dice

8. (plural) an informal nickname for a doctor

9. close to the bone near the bone

a. risqué or indecent: his jokes are rather close to the bone.

b. in poverty; destitute

10. feel in one’s bones to have an intuition of

11. have a bone to pick to have grounds for a quarrel

12. make no bones about

a. to be direct and candid about

b. to have no scruples about

13. point the bone (often foll by at)

a. to wish bad luck (on)

b. to threaten to bring about the downfall (of)

vb (mainly tr)

14. (Cookery) to remove the bones from (meat for cooking, etc)

15. (Clothing & Fashion) to stiffen (a corset, etc) by inserting bones

16. (Agriculture) to fertilize with bone meal

17. taboo slang to have sexual intercourse with

18. Brit a slang word for steal

[Old English bān; related to Old Norse béin, Old Frisian bēn, Old High German bein]

ˈboneless adj


Bône

(French bon)

n

(Placename) a former name of Annaba

Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014

bone

(boʊn)

n., v. boned, bon•ing,
adv. n.

1.

a. one of the structures composing the skeleton of a vertebrate.

b. the hard connective tissue forming these structures, composed of cells enclosed in a calcified matrix.

2. such a structure from an edible animal, usu. with meat adhering to it, as an article of food: a ham bone.

3. any of various similarly hard or structural animal substances, as ivory or whalebone.

4. something resembling such a substance.

5. bones,

a. the skeleton.

b. a body: to rest one’s weary bones.

c. dice.

d. a simple rhythm instrument consisting of two bars of bone, ivory, or wood, held between the fingers and clacked together.

6. the color of bone; ivory or off-white.

7. a flat strip of whalebone or other material for stiffening corsets, petticoats, etc.; stay.

v.t.

8. to remove the bones from: to bone a turkey.

9. to put whalebone or another stiffener into (clothing).

10. bone up, Informal. to study intensely; cram: to bone up for an exam.

adv.

11. completely; absolutely: bone tired.

Idioms:

1. feel in one’s bones, to be sure intuitively.

2. have a bone to pick with someone, to have cause for reproaching someone.

3. make no bones about,

a. to act or speak openly and decisively about.

b. to have no fear of or objection to.

4. throw a bone, to give a small concession as a sop.

[before 900; Middle English bo(o)n, Old English bān; c. Old Frisian, Old Saxon bēn, Old High German, Old Norse bein]

Bône

(boʊn)

n.

Random House Kernerman Webster’s College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.

click for a larger image

bone

cross section of an adult human femur

bone

(bōn)

1. The hard, dense, calcified tissue that forms the skeleton of most vertebrates. Bone serves as a framework for the attachment of muscles and protects vital organs, such as the brain. It also contains large amounts of calcium, a mineral that is essential for proper cell function. Blood cells and platelets are produced in the marrow, the central cavity of bone. See more at osteoblast, osteocyte.

2. Any of the bones in a skeleton, such as the femur in the leg of a mammal.

The American Heritage® Student Science Dictionary, Second Edition. Copyright © 2014 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

bone

Past participle: boned
Gerund: boning

Imperative
bone
bone
Present
I bone
you bone
he/she/it bones
we bone
you bone
they bone
Preterite
I boned
you boned
he/she/it boned
we boned
you boned
they boned
Present Continuous
I am boning
you are boning
he/she/it is boning
we are boning
you are boning
they are boning
Present Perfect
I have boned
you have boned
he/she/it has boned
we have boned
you have boned
they have boned
Past Continuous
I was boning
you were boning
he/she/it was boning
we were boning
you were boning
they were boning
Past Perfect
I had boned
you had boned
he/she/it had boned
we had boned
you had boned
they had boned
Future
I will bone
you will bone
he/she/it will bone
we will bone
you will bone
they will bone
Future Perfect
I will have boned
you will have boned
he/she/it will have boned
we will have boned
you will have boned
they will have boned
Future Continuous
I will be boning
you will be boning
he/she/it will be boning
we will be boning
you will be boning
they will be boning
Present Perfect Continuous
I have been boning
you have been boning
he/she/it has been boning
we have been boning
you have been boning
they have been boning
Future Perfect Continuous
I will have been boning
you will have been boning
he/she/it will have been boning
we will have been boning
you will have been boning
they will have been boning
Past Perfect Continuous
I had been boning
you had been boning
he/she/it had been boning
we had been boning
you had been boning
they had been boning
Conditional
I would bone
you would bone
he/she/it would bone
we would bone
you would bone
they would bone
Past Conditional
I would have boned
you would have boned
he/she/it would have boned
we would have boned
you would have boned
they would have boned

Collins English Verb Tables © HarperCollins Publishers 2011

bone

1. Dense connective tissue hardened by deposits of calcium carbonate and calcium phosphate.

2. To remove the bones from fish, meat or poultry.

Dictionary of Unfamiliar Words by Diagram Group Copyright © 2008 by Diagram Visual Information Limited

ThesaurusAntonymsRelated WordsSynonymsLegend:

Noun 1. bone - rigid connective tissue that makes up the skeleton of vertebratesbone — rigid connective tissue that makes up the skeleton of vertebrates

os

horn — one of the bony outgrowths on the heads of certain ungulates

furcula — a forked bone formed by the fusion of the clavicles of most birds

splint bone — a rudimentary metacarpal or metatarsal bone on either side of the cannon bone in the leg of a horse or related animal

fetter bone, pastern — the part between the fetlock and the hoof

cannon bone — greatly developed metatarsal or metacarpal bone in the shank or cannon part of the leg in hoofed mammals

fishbone — a bone of a fish

anklebone, astragal, astragalus, talus — the bone in the ankle that articulates with the leg bones to form the ankle joint

bare bone — bone stripped of flesh

cuboid bone — the cube shaped bone on the outer side of the tarsus

carpal, carpal bone, wrist bone — any of the eight small bones of the wrist of primates

cartilage bone — any bone that develops within cartilage rather than a fibrous tissue

centrum — the main body of a vertebra

cheekbone, jugal bone, malar, malar bone, os zygomaticum, zygomatic, zygomatic bone — the arch of bone beneath the eye that forms the prominence of the cheek

clavicle, collarbone — bone linking the scapula and sternum

coccyx, tail bone — the end of the vertebral column in humans and tailless apes

dentin, dentine — bone (calcified tissue) surrounding the pulp cavity of a tooth

ethmoid, ethmoid bone — one of the eight bones of the cranium; a small bone filled with air spaces that forms part of the eye sockets and the nasal cavity

calcaneus, heelbone, os tarsi fibulare — the largest tarsal bone; forms the human heel

hipbone, innominate bone — large flaring bone forming one half of the pelvis; made up of the ilium and ischium and pubis

hyoid, hyoid bone, os hyoideum — a U-shaped bone at the base of the tongue that supports the tongue muscles

ilium — the upper and widest of the three bones making up the hipbone

ischial bone, ischium, os ischii — one of the three sections of the hipbone; situated below the ilium

long bone, os longum — in limbs of vertebrate animals: a long cylindrical bone that contains marrow

ramus — the posterior part of the mandible that is more or less vertical

membrane bone — any bone that develops within membranous tissue without previous cartilage formation; e.g. the clavicle and bones of the skull

metacarpal, metacarpal bone — any bone of the hand between the wrist and fingers

metatarsal — any bone of the foot between the ankle and the toes

nasal bone, os nasale, nasal — an elongated rectangular bone that forms the bridge of the nose

bonelet, ossicle, ossiculum — a small bone; especially one in the middle ear

os palatinum, palatine bone, palatine — either of two irregularly shaped bones that form the back of the hard palate and helps to form the nasal cavity and the floor of the orbits

phalanx — any of the bones of the fingers or toes

os pubis, pubic bone, pubis — one of the three sections of the hipbone; together these two bones form the front of the pelvis

costa, rib — any of the 12 pairs of curved arches of bone extending from the spine to or toward the sternum in humans (and similar bones in most vertebrates)

round bone — bones that are round in shape

sacrum — wedge-shaped bone consisting of five fused vertebrae forming the posterior part of the pelvis; its base connects with the lowest lumbar vertebra and its tip with the coccyx

scapula, shoulder blade, shoulder bone — either of two flat triangular bones one on each side of the shoulder in human beings

os sesamoideum, sesamoid, sesamoid bone — any of several small round bones formed in a tendon where it passes over a joint

os breve, short bone — a bone that is of approximately equal dimension in all directions

socket — a bony hollow into which a structure fits

os sphenoidale, sphenoid, sphenoid bone — butterfly-shaped bone at the base of the skull

breastbone, sternum — the flat bone that articulates with the clavicles and the first seven pairs of ribs

corpus sternum, gladiolus — the large central part of the breastbone

manubrium — the upper part of the breastbone

xiphoid process — smallest of the three parts of the breastbone; articulates with the corpus sternum and the seventh rib

2. bone — the porous calcified substance from which bones are made

osseous tissue

bone, os — rigid connective tissue that makes up the skeleton of vertebrates

animal material — material derived from animals

3. bone - a shade of white the color of bleached bonesbone — a shade of white the color of bleached bones

off-white, pearl, ivory

whiteness, white — the quality or state of the achromatic color of greatest lightness (bearing the least resemblance to black)

Verb 1. bone — study intensively, as before an exam; «I had to bone up on my Latin verbs before the final exam»

bone up, grind away, mug up, swot, swot up, cram, drum, get up

cram — prepare (students) hastily for an impending exam

hit the books, study — learn by reading books; «He is studying geology in his room»; «I have an exam next week; I must hit the books now»

2. bone — remove the bones from; «bone the turkey before roasting it»

debone

animal, animate being, beast, creature, fauna, brute — a living organism characterized by voluntary movement

remove, take away, withdraw, take — remove something concrete, as by lifting, pushing, or taking off, or remove something abstract; «remove a threat»; «remove a wrapper»; «Remove the dirty dishes from the table»; «take the gun from your pocket»; «This machine withdraws heat from the environment»

Adj. 1. bone — consisting of or made up of bone; «a bony substance»; «the bony framework of the body»

boney, bony — having bones especially many or prominent bones; «a bony shad fillet»; «her bony wrist»; «bony fish»

Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.

bone

noun

Bones

Bone Nontechnical names
astragalus anklebone
calcaneus heel bone
carpal wrist
carpus wrist
clavicle collarbone
coccyx
costa rib
cranium brainpan
cuboid
ethmoid
femur thighbone
fibula
frontal bone
hallux
humerus
hyoid
ilium
incus anvil
innominate bone hipbone
ischium
malleus hammer
mandible lower jawbone
maxilla upper jawbone
metacarpal
metatarsal
metatarsus
occipital bone
parietal bone
patella kneecap
pelvis
phalanx
pubis
radius
rib
sacrum
scapula shoulder blade
skull
sphenoid
spinal column or spine backbone
stapes stirrup
sternum breastbone
talus anklebone
tarsal
tarsus
temporal bone
tibia shinbone
ulna
vertebra
vertebral column backbone
zygomatic bone cheekbone

Collins Thesaurus of the English Language – Complete and Unabridged 2nd Edition. 2002 © HarperCollins Publishers 1995, 2002

bone

verb

Informal. To study or work hard, especially when pressed for time.Also used with up:

The American Heritage® Roget’s Thesaurus. Copyright © 2013, 2014 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

Translations

عَظْمعَظْمَةعَظْمَـهييَنْزَعُ العَظْمَ أو الحَسَك

кост

kostvykostit

knogleben

kalaluukontluuvaalaluu

استخوان

luunaidanussiaruoto

kost

csontkicsontozszálka

tulang

beinúrbeina

os

į kauląiki kaulų smegenųiki minimumoišimti kaulusišsiaiškinti nemalonų reikalą su

kaulsasakaizņemt kaulus / asakas

kosťodkostiť

kost

ben

กระดูก

kemikkemiklerini/kılçıklarını ayıklamakkılçık

xương

bone

[bəʊn]

A. N

2. (= substance) → hueso m

Collins Spanish Dictionary — Complete and Unabridged 8th Edition 2005 © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1971, 1988 © HarperCollins Publishers 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 2000, 2003, 2005

Collins English/French Electronic Resource. © HarperCollins Publishers 2005

bone

n

(Mus) bones plKlangstäbe pl

(= dice) bones pl (inf)Würfel pl, → Knöchel pl (old)


bone

:

bone dry

adj pred, bone-dry

boneheaded

adj (inf)blöd(e) (inf), → doof (inf)

bone marrow

nKnochenmark nt; bone donorKnochenmarkspender(in) m(f)


bone

:

Collins German Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged 7th Edition 2005. © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1980 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1997, 1999, 2004, 2005, 2007

bone

[bəʊn]

3. adj (buttons) → d’osso

Collins Italian Dictionary 1st Edition © HarperCollins Publishers 1995

bone

(bəun) noun

1. the hard substance forming the skeleton of man, animals etc. Bone decays far more slowly than flesh.

2. a piece of this substance. She broke two of the bones in her foot.

verb

to take the bones out of (fish etc).

ˈbony adjective

1. like bone. a bony substance.

2. full of bones. This fish is very bony.

3. thin. bony fingers.

bone china

china in whose manufacture the ashes of burnt bones are used.

bone idle

very lazy. He could find a job but he’s bone idle.

a bone of contention

a cause of argument or quarrelling. Ownership of the boat was a bone of contention between the two men for many years.

have a bone to pick with (someone)

to have something to argue about with (a person).

to the bone

1. thoroughly and completely. I was chilled to the bone.

2. to the minimum. I’ve cut my expenses to the bone.

Kernerman English Multilingual Dictionary © 2006-2013 K Dictionaries Ltd.

bone

عَظْمَة kost knogle Knochen οστό hueso luu os kost osso bot bein kość osso кость ben กระดูก kemik xương 骨头

Multilingual Translator © HarperCollins Publishers 2009

bone

1. n. hueso.

2. [fish] espina;

___ cellosteoblasto;

___ chipsastillas de ___;

___ densitydensidad ósea;

___ developmentdesarrollo óseo;

___ fracturefractura, ___ quebrado;

___ fragilityfragilidad ósea;

___ graftinjerto óseo;

___ hookgancho óseo;

___ lesionslesiones en los ___ -s;

___ lossosteopenia;

___ marrowmédula ósea, pop. tuétano;

___ marrow failurefallo de la médula ósea;

___ plateplaca ósea;

___ splinteresquirla, astilla ósea;

hard ______ compacto;

he swallowed a fish ___se tragó una espina de ___;

spongy ______ esponjoso;

v.

deshuesarsacar los ___ -s;

v.

to make no ___ -s about ithablar sin rodeos;

skin and ___ -spiel y ___-s, muy delgado pop. estar en el hueso.

English-Spanish Medical Dictionary © Farlex 2012

bone

adj óseo; — marrow médula ósea; n hueso; (of a fish) espina; ankle — hueso del tobillo; breast — esternón m (form), hueso del pecho; collar — (fam) clavícula; hip — hueso de la cadera

English-Spanish/Spanish-English Medical Dictionary Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

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Anterior bone of pelvic girdle

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Terms in this set (8)

Anterior bone of pelvic girdle

Pubis

Word form for bone marrow

Myelo

Joint that doesn’t move

Fibrous joint

U shaped bone between larynx and mandible

Hyoid

hard outer layer of bone

compact bone

The cheek bone

zygomatic

vertebrae in the lower back

lumbar

Inner aspect of eye orbit

Lacrimal

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