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Definition of Bartholin
1. Noun. Danish physician who discovered Bartholin's gland (1585-1629).
Lexicographical Neighbors of Bartholin
Literary usage of Bartholin
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Harvard Studies and Notes in Philology and Literature by Dept. of Modern Languages, Harvard University (1903)
"In the course of his treatise bartholin makes a great number of extracts from Norse
... This was in Norse, Swedish, and Latin.8 Other 1 Albert bartholin ..."
2. Scandinavian Influences in the English Romantic Movement by Frank Edgar Parley (1903)
"In the course of his treatise bartholin makes a great number of extracts from Norse
... This was in Norse, Swedish, and Latin.8 Other 1 Albert bartholin ..."
3. Studies and Notes in Philology and Literature (1903)
"In the course of his treatise bartholin makes a great number of extracts from
Norse poems and sagas, many of them never before printed. ..."
4. Anatomical Names: Especially the Basle Nomina Anatomica ("BNA") by Albert Chauncey Eycleshymer, Daniel Martin Schoemaker, Roy Lee Moodie, Wilhelm His (1917)
"The wife of Caspar bartholin, Senior, and the wife of Ole Worm, Senior, were the
daughters of Thomas Fincke, (1561-1656). " The Danes to this day are ..."
5. Anatomy, Descriptive and Surgical by Henry Gray (1901)
"Glands of bartholin.—On each side of the commencement of the vagina, ... It is
called the gland of bartholin. Each gland opens by means of a long single ..."
6. The Book-lover's Enchiridion: Thoughts on the Solace and Companionship of by Alexander Ireland (1884)
"THOMAS V. bartholin. 1619—1680. Without books, God is silent, justice dormant,
natural science at a stand, philosophy lame, letters dumb, and all things ..."