Lexicographical Neighbors of Coitional
coinvestor coinvestors coir coire licet coirs coisogenic coistrel coistrels coistril coistrils | coit coitional (current term) coitions coits coix cojoin cojoined cojoining cojoins |
Literary usage of Coitional
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. A Practical treatise on sexual disorders of the male and female by Robert William Taylor (1905)
"In very old and extensive ¡nodular strictures of the bulbo-mem- branous junction
there is no post-coitional flow of semen, and this secretion then passes ..."
2. A Text-book of diseases of women by Barton Cooke Hirst (1905)
"The atresia was not corrected, as the only purpose of such treatment would have
been to establish a coitional vagina, which is not always practicable in the ..."
3. The Auk: Quarterly Journal of Ornithology by American Ornithologists' Union, Nuttall Ornithological Club (1917)
"... the alx>ve inference need not- alone apply to species that have this odd habit
of double coitional functioning, for a general inherited tendency need ..."
4. Transactions of the American Association of Obstetricians and Gynecologists by American Association of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (1908)
"death from hemorrhage or shock, as suggested by Dr. Price. We occasionally see
reports of coitional violence, ..."
5. A Text-book of obstetrics by Barton Cooke Hirst (1909)
"... has thrice successfully performed a curious operation for making a coitional
vagina : An incision is made alongside the sacrum and coccyx ; the latter ..."
6. American Medicine (1921)
"It is a gross presentation, not imitation, of the coitional motions. In the old
dances, esthet- icism was the ruling motive, the modern dance represents an ..."
7. Gynæcology for students & practitioners by Thomas Watts Eden (1920)
"coitional haemorrhage may, however, sometimes occur from other causes such as
an ' erosion ' or a mucous polypus, so that this symptom cannot be regarded as ..."
8. A Textbook of Gynecology by Charles Alfred Lee Reed (1901)
"... and evacuate the retained menstrual blood; under the latter, it is mainly 'to
establish what may be called a coitional vagina by a plastic operation. ..."