belly

التعريفات والمعاني

== English == === Alternative forms === bellie (archaic) === Etymology === Inherited from Middle English bely, beli, bali, below, belew, balyw, from Old English bielġ (“bag, pouch, bulge”), from Proto-West Germanic *balgi, *balgu, from Proto-Germanic *balgiz, *balguz (“skin, hide, bellows, bag”), from Proto-Indo-European *bʰelǵʰ- (“to swell, blow up”). Cognate with Dutch balg, German Balg, Danish bælg, Old Irish bolg, Welsh bol. Doublet of bellows, blague, bulge, and budge. See also bellows. For the belly — bellows connection compare typologically Macedonian мев (mev, “abdomen, belly; bellows”). Also compare Ancient Greek φῦσα (phûsa, “bellows; bladder; ...”), Latin venter — vēsīca, Russian пу́зо (púzo) — пузы́рь (puzýrʹ), пузырёк (puzyrjók). === Pronunciation === IPA(key): /ˈbɛli/ Rhymes: -ɛli Hyphenation: bel‧ly === Noun === belly (plural bellies) The abdomen (especially a fat one). stomach (an organ in animals that stores food in the process of digestion) (anatomy, countable) uterus (a reproductive organ of therian mammals in which the young are conceived and develop until birth) Synonyms: matrix (now archaic), metra, uterus, womb The lower fuselage of an airplane. The part of anything which resembles (either closely or abstractly) the human belly in protuberance or in concavity; often, the fundus (innermost part). The main curved portion of a knife blade. (architecture) The hollow part of a curved or bent timber, the convex part of which is the back. ==== Usage notes ==== Formerly, all the splanchnic or visceral cavities were called bellies: the lower belly being the abdomen; the middle belly, the thorax; and the upper belly, the head. ==== Derived terms ==== ==== Descendants ==== Hawaiian Creole: belly Sranan Tongo: bereAukan: beeSaramaccan: bë́ë ==== Translations ==== ==== See also ==== === Verb === belly (third-person singular simple present bellies, present participle bellying, simple past and past participle bellied) To position one’s belly; to move on one’s belly. (intransitive) To swell and become protuberant; to bulge or billow. 1917 rev. 1925 Ezra Pound, "Canto I" winds from sternward Bore us onward with bellying canvas ... 1930, Otis Adelbert Kline, The Prince of Peril, serialized in Argosy, Chapter 1,[3] The building stood on a circular foundation, and its walls, instead of mounting skyward in a straight line, bellied outward and then curved in again at the top. (transitive) To cause to swell out; to fill. ==== Derived terms ==== == Hawaiian Creole == === Etymology === Derived from English belly. === Noun === belly stomach (an organ in animals that stores food in the process of digestion)