umbilicus

Valid in Scrabble

Scrabble points
15
Words With Friends
21
Letters
9
Pronunciation
/ˌʌmˈbɪlɪkəs/
See all 2 pronunciations
/ˌʌmˈbɪlɪkəs/ · /ʌmbɪˈlʌɪkəs/(UK)

Definition of umbilicus

9 senses · 1 part of speech · etymology included

noun

  1. A navel.
See all 9 definitions

noun

  1. A navel.
  2. (broadly, proscribed, sometimes)Umbilical cord
    “Although I have been tempted to cut the umbilicus, and pass a ligature round the remaining portion on one occasion, yet I now deem such interference officious and uncalled - for at this eventful period.”
    “She ate the umbilicus, and the afterbirth, which is supposed to be good for them. Then she licked off the first kitten and was ready for the next.”
    “Then he tied the umbilicus in two places, using bits of Manila twine, and made his cut between them.”
  3. A hilum.
  4. A depression or opening in the center of the base of many spiral shells.
  5. Either of the two apertures in the calamus of a feather.
  6. A tube connecting an astronaut or spacecraft to the mothership, through which supplies and samples can be transferred.
    “The importance of the visual analyzer is further increased when the cosmonaut is in free space with only the slight support of an umbilicus.”
    “Penetrators will be connected by an umbilicus to an afterbody containing imaging and meteorological instruments.”
    “How about a 270 mile tether to an orbiting satellite? Oh, you'd like that, wouldn't you? Frank! Prepare to receive the umbilicus!”
    “Ninety minutes into the twenty-six hour flight, Leonov opened the outer hatch and pushed himself out to the end of his 17-foot umbilicus — becoming the first man to walk in space.”
  7. (obsolete)One of the foci of an ellipse or other curve.
  8. A point of a surface at which the curvatures of the normal sections are all equal to each other.
    “A sphere may be osculatory to the surface in every direction at an umbilicus.”
  9. (historical)An ornamented or painted ball or boss fastened at each end of the stick on which manuscripts were rolled.
    “The ends of the umbilicus were called cornua (i.e. horns) in Latin, and were usually adorned with some pretty device”

Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.

Etymology

Borrowed from Latin umbilīcus (“navel”).

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