carcinoma

noun
/ˌkɑːsɪˈnəʊmə/UK/ˌkɑɹsɪˈnoʊmə/US

Etymology

Learned borrowing from Latin carcinōma (“tumour; ulcer; carcinoma”), from Ancient Greek κᾰρκῐ́νωμᾰ (kărkĭ́nōmă, “sore, ulcer; cancer”), from καρκινόω (karkinóō, “to make (something) resemble a crab”, in the mediopassive "to become cancerous; to suffer from cancer") + -μᾰ (-mă, action noun suffix). Καρκινόω is derived from καρκῐ́νος (karkĭ́nos, “crab; the zodiac sign Cancer; sore, ulcer; cancer”) (according to Paul of Aegina (c. 625 – c. 690) in his Medical Compendium in Seven Books, because the veins surrounding a cancerous tumour resemble a crab’s legs). The English word is a doublet of cancer, and may be analysed as carcino- + -oma. The plural form carcinomata is a learned borrowing from Latin carcinōmata, from Ancient Greek κᾰρκῐνώμᾰτᾰ (kărkĭnṓmătă).

  1. learned borrowing from carcinōmata
  2. derived from κᾰρκῐ́νωμᾰ — “sore, ulcer; cancer
  3. learned borrowing from carcinōma — “tumour; ulcer; carcinoma

Definitions

  1. An invasive malignant tumour derived from epithelial tissue that tends to metastasize to…

    An invasive malignant tumour derived from epithelial tissue that tends to metastasize to other areas of the body.

  2. A form of cancer

    A form of cancer; (uncountable) cancer in general as a disease.

    • Take the fatteſt and fulleſt Figs you can get, lay them upon the ugly and ill favored tumor called Carcinoma, i. the Canker, ſo it be not yet exulcerat, I aſſure you it is a ſoveraine remedie, and hardly can be matched againe: […]

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for carcinoma. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA