digitalis

noun
/dɪdʒɪˈtɑːlɪs/UK/dɪd͡ʒɪˈtælɪs/US

Etymology

Modern Latin, from Latin digitālis (“of the fingers”) (named in reference to the German common name for the plant, Fingerhut (“thimble”)). Doublet of digital.

  1. derived from digitālis

Definitions

  1. Any plant of the genus Digitalis (herbaceous plants of the Plantaginaceae family,…

    Any plant of the genus Digitalis (herbaceous plants of the Plantaginaceae family, including the foxglove, Digitalis purpurea).

    • 11. Delphiniums and digitalises.
    • At the Medico-Botanical Society on Tuesday, Dr. Morries, made some some observations on opium, digitales, conium, and hyoscyamus, and exhibited specimens of oils obtained from the latter plants.
    • Polemoniums of various species, aubretias, dwarf phloxes, delphiniums, digitalises, gerums, erigerons and a number of other things have bloomed a second time […]
  2. A medical extract of Digitalis purpurea prescribed for heart failure etc.

    • ‘You very nearly died. I had to give you digitalis three times.’
    • The ancient remedy digitalis, extracted from the foxglove plant, for example, acts by blocking sodium channels in heart muscle, preventing potentially dangerous overactivity.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for digitalis. 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