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Consult Chambers 21st Century Dictionary, The Chambers Thesaurus (1996) or Chambers Biographical Dictionary (1997 edition with amendments). Enter your search and choose your title from the drop-down menu.

Search results for 'suture':

suture noun 1 a a stitch that joins the edges of a wound, surgical incision, etc together; b the joining of such edges together; c the thread, wire, etc that is used for this. 2 anatomy the junction or meeting point of two non-articulating bones, eg in the skull. verb (sutured, suturing) to sew up (a wound, surgical incision, etc).
ETYMOLOGY: 16c: French, from Latin sutura, from suere to sew.

suture noun 1 a a stitch that joins the edges of a wound, surgical incision, etc together; b the joining of such edges together; c the thread, wire, etc that is used for this. 2 anatomy the junction or meeting point of two non-articulating bones, eg in the skull. verb (sutured, suturing) to sew up (a wound, surgical incision, etc).
ETYMOLOGY: 16c: French, from Latin sutura, from suere to sew.

suture noun 1 a a stitch that joins the edges of a wound, surgical incision, etc together; b the joining of such edges together; c the thread, wire, etc that is used for this. 2 anatomy the junction or meeting point of two non-articulating bones, eg in the skull. verb (sutured, suturing) to sew up (a wound, surgical incision, etc).
ETYMOLOGY: 16c: French, from Latin sutura, from suere to sew.