womb
nounEtymology
From Middle English wombe, wambe, from Old English womb, wamb (“belly, stomach; bowels; heart; womb; hollow”), from Proto-West Germanic *wambu, from Proto-Germanic *wambō (“belly, stomach, abdomen”). Cognate with Scots wam, wame (“womb”), Dutch wam (“dewlap of beef; belly of a fish”), German Wamme, Wampe (“paunch, belly”), Danish vom (“belly, paunch, rumen”), Swedish våmb (“belly, stomach, rumen”), Norwegian vom (“rumen”), Icelandic vömb (“belly, abdomen, stomach”), Old Welsh gumbelauc (“womb”), Breton gwamm (“woman, wife”), Sanskrit वपा (vapā́, “the skin or membrane lining the intestines or parts of the viscera, the caul or omentum”). Superseded nonnative Middle English mater, matere (“womb”), and matris, matrice (“womb”) borrowed from Latin māter (“womb”) and Old French matrice (“womb”), respectively.
Definitions
In female mammals, the organ in which the young are conceived and grow until birth
In female mammals, the organ in which the young are conceived and grow until birth; the uterus.
- I danced myself right out the womb / Is it strange to dance so soon?
The abdomen or stomach.
- And his hede, hym semed,was enamyled with asure, and his shuldyrs shone as the golde, and his wombe was lyke mayles of a merveylous hew[…].
The stomach of a person or creature.
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A place where something is made or formed.
- The womb of earth the genial seed receives.
- The shadows of the future hours rose dark and menacing from the womb of time [...]
Any cavity containing and enveloping anything.
- The centre spike of gold Which burns deep in the blue-bell's womb.
To enclose in a womb, or as if in a womb
To enclose in a womb, or as if in a womb; to breed or hold in secret.
- she grew round-wombed
The neighborhood
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for womb. 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