Vagina

来自Big Physics

google

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late 17th century: from Latin, literally ‘sheath, scabbard’.


Ety img vagina.png

wiktionary

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Learned borrowing from Latin vāgīna(“a sheath, scabbard; a covering, sheath, holder”). 


etymonline

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vagina (n.)

"sexual passage of the female from the vulva to the uterus," 1680s, medical Latin, from specialized use of Latin vagina "sheath, scabbard, covering; sheath of an ear of grain, hull, husk" (plural vaginae), a word of uncertain origin. Perhaps cognate with Lithuanian vožiu,vožti "to cover with a hollow thing," but de Vaan points out that "Obviously, this is a gratuitous proposal." A modern medical word; the Latin word was not used in an anatomical sense in classical times. Anthropological vagina dentata is attested from 1902.