Artery

来自Big Physics

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late Middle English: from Latin arteria, from Greek artēria, probably from airein ‘raise’.


Ety img artery.png

wiktionary

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Late Middle English arterie, borrowing from Old French artaire and Latin artēria(“a windpipe; an artery”), from Ancient Greek ᾰ̓ρτηρῐ́ᾱ(artēríā, “windpipe; artery”).


etymonline

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artery (n.)

late 14c., "an arterial blood vessel," from Anglo-French arterie, Old French artaire (13c.; Modern French artère), and directly from Latin arteria, from Greek arteria "windpipe," also "an artery," as distinct from a vein; related to aeirein "to raise" (see aorta).

They were regarded by the ancients as air ducts because the arteries do not contain blood after death, and 14c.-16c. artery in English also could mean "trachea, windpipe." Medieval writers, based on Galen, generally took them as a separate blood system for the "vital spirits." The word is used in reference to artery-like systems of major rivers from 1805; of railways from 1844.