fascia
Valid in Scrabble
- Scrabble points
- 11
- Words With Friends
- 12
- Letters
- 6
See all 6 pronunciations Show less
Definition of fascia
9 senses · 1 part of speech · etymology included
noun
- A wide band of material covering the ends of roof rafters, sometimes supporting a gutter in steep-slope roofing, but typically it is a border or trim in low-slope roofing.
See all 9 definitions Show less
noun
- A wide band of material covering the ends of roof rafters, sometimes supporting a gutter in steep-slope roofing, but typically it is a border or trim in low-slope roofing.
- A face or front cover of an appliance, especially of a mobile phone.
- (UK)A dashboard.
- A flat band or broad fillet; especially, one of the three bands that make up the architrave, in the Ionic order.
- A broad well-defined band of color.
- A band, sash, or fillet; especially, in surgery, a bandage or roller.
- A sash worn with a cassock by clergy of the Catholic and Anglican churches.
-
The layer of loose tissue, often containing fat, immediately beneath the skin; the stronger layer of connective tissue covering and investing muscles and organs; an aponeurosis.
“The deepest layer of cervical fascia consists of two main subdivisions: the alar and prevertebral fasciae.”
“Close-up of the fascia surrounding a muscle in an unembalmed cadaver.”
“2017, Andrea Pasini, Antonio Stecco, Carla Stecco, 19: Fascial Anatomy of the Viscera, Torsten Liem, Paolo Tozzi, Anthony Chila (editors), Fascia in the Osteopathic Field, Handspring Publishing, page 173, This is evidence that the insertional fasciae are the ones that provide the connections between internal fasciae and muscular fascia, and between the different organs. The same pattern can be applied to the fasciae that surround the glands.”
“The superficial fascia surrounds the body and includes subcutaneous fat; the deep fascia surrounds the musculoskeletal system; the meningeal fascia surrounds the nervous system; the visceral fascia surrounds body cavities and organs.”
- The signboard above a shop or other location open to the public.
Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.
Etymology
Borrowed from Latin fascia (“a band, bandage, swathe”). Related to fascēs (“bundle of rods containing an axe with the blade projecting”), from Proto-Indo-European *bʰask- (“bundle, band”). Cognate with fajita, fess, and fascism.
Words you can make from fascia
23 playable · top: FACIAS (11 pts)
Best play facias 11 points5-letter words
2 words4-letter words
5 words3-letter words
8 words2-letter words
7 wordsHooks
3 extensions · 3 back
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