• Thumbnail for Copula linguae
    The copula linguae or copula, is a swelling that forms from the second pharyngeal arch, late in the fourth week of embryogenesis. During the fifth and...
    1 KB (106 words) - 08:09, 13 June 2020
  • box jellyfish Beatmania IIDX 23: Copula, a video game Copula linguae, an embryonic structure of the tongue Copulas in signal processing Copulation (zoology)...
    756 bytes (121 words) - 20:54, 2 June 2022
  • Thumbnail for Thyroid
    at the base of the tongue between the tuberculum impar and the copula linguae. The copula soon becomes covered over by the hypopharyngeal eminence at a...
    74 KB (8,001 words) - 10:46, 19 July 2024
  • appears as an epithelial proliferation in the pharynx floor between the copula linguae and the tuberculum impar. This point later will be the foramen cecum...
    13 KB (1,675 words) - 19:54, 11 February 2024
  • Thumbnail for Tongue
    Tongue (redirect from Apex linguae)
    second pharyngeal arch, in the midline, called the copula. During the fifth and sixth weeks, the copula is overgrown by a swelling from the third and fourth...
    40 KB (4,616 words) - 10:33, 2 May 2024
  • Takashima Ken'ichi; born 1939) is, according to the editors of the Thesaurus Linguae Sinicae, "the world's leading authority on Shang dynasty oracle bone inscriptions"...
    16 KB (2,347 words) - 21:14, 24 May 2024
  • forms of the copula be (see subject–auxiliary inversion). To form a question from a sentence which does not have such an auxiliary or copula present, the...
    87 KB (11,190 words) - 15:01, 8 July 2024
  • Multiple dialects are Chaldean, Syrian, Samaritan."; Latin Original: Linguae Aramaeae nomen à gentis conditore, Aramo nimirum (Gen. X 22) desumptum...
    156 KB (17,008 words) - 05:03, 21 July 2024
  • Thumbnail for Standard Chinese
    dialectal variation throughout its history, including prestige dialects and linguae francae used throughout the territory controlled by the dynastic states...
    78 KB (7,846 words) - 23:05, 10 July 2024
  • Thumbnail for Languages of the Caribbean
    "John book" instead of Standard English, "John's book", the omission of the copula in structures such as "he sick" and "the boy reading". In Standard English...
    27 KB (2,793 words) - 17:00, 13 July 2024