Definition of Cotyla. Meaning of Cotyla. Synonyms of Cotyla

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Cotyla. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Cotyla and, of course, Cotyla synonyms and on the right images related to the word Cotyla.

Definition of Cotyla

Cotyla
Cotyla Cot"y*la (k?t"?-l?), Cotyle Cot"y*le (k?t"?-l?), n. [Gr. ??? anything hollow, cup of a joint, small meassure: cf. L. cotyla a measure.] (Anat.) A cuplike cavity or organ. Same as Acetabulum.

Meaning of Cotyla from wikipedia

- end of the radius and of the ulna in birds. In classical antiquity, the cotyla or cotyle (from Ancient Gr**** κοτύλη (kotúlē), 'cup, bowl') was a measure...
- Museum. Comparable forms of a handled drinking cup on a base included: Cotyla, a more generic term for any cup. Kantharos Komast cup Kylix The word "skyphos"...
- are almost oval and deeply concave. The lateral cotyla on the outer side is smaller than the medial cotyla on the inner side, and is slightly below it. The...
- common unit in both measures throughout historic Greece was the cotyle or cotyla whose absolute value varied from one place to another between 210 ml and...
- stacked firewood with the symbol cd-ft equal to 16 cu ft (0.45 m3): 52  Cotyla Cran Cullishi**** Deal – a former U.K. and U.S. unit of volume for stacked...
- 30 fl oz quartarius 1⁄24 congius 136 mL 4.79 fl oz 4.61 fl oz hemina or cotyla 1⁄12 congius 273 mL 9.61 fl oz 9.23 fl oz ****tarius 1⁄6 congius 546 mL 19...
- Cenia Comm. ex Juss. Cenia sect. Actinocenia DC. Hippia L.f. Cteno**** Hook.f. Lancisia Fabr. Machlis DC. Otochlamys DC. Cotyla O.****ze & T. von Post...
- 80×10−4 One gō (a common size for serving sake) 2.73×10−4 one Roman hemina or cotyla 3.3–3.75×10−4 Volume of stubby or steinie of beer (Europe–330 mL, Canada–341 mL...
- a greater curvature to its shaft, while both the external and internal cotyla are wider in proximal view. The distal tendinal groove runs almost perpendicular...
- reinforcements from Antiochus to hold his position, Ptolemy then fled to Zeno Cotylas, the tyrant of Philadelphia (now Amman, Jordan). At some point in late...