Lexicographical Neighbors of Trigeminals
Literary usage of Trigeminals
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Human body by Henry Newell Martin (1898)
"The fifth pair or trigeminals (V) resemble the spinal nerves in having two roots,
one of which possesses a ganglion (the Gasserian ganglion). ..."
2. The Human Body: A Beginner's Text-book of Anatomy, Physiology and Hygiene by Henry Newell Martin (1898)
"... The fifth pair or trigeminals (I7) resemble the spinal nerves in having two
roots, one of which possesses a ganglion (the Gasserian ganglion). ..."
3. The Human Body: A Text-book of Anatomy, Physiology and Hygiene by Henry Newell Martin (1890)
"The fifth pair of cranial nerves, V, (trigeminals,) resemble the spinal nerves
in having two roots, one of which possesses a ganglion (the ..."
4. Journal of Cutaneous Diseases Including Syphilis by American Dermatological Association (1913)
"Although eighty per cent, of the cases had dental trouble of some sort, »hich
implies a possibility of irritation through the trigeminals, in only nine ..."
5. A System of Psychology by Daniel Greenleaf Thompson (1884)
"... distributed over the hind part of the tongue and the lingual branches of the
inferior maxillary division of the trigeminals on its anterior two- thirds. ..."
6. A Text-book in General Physiology and Anatomy by Walter Hollis Eddy (1907)
"The fifth pair, or trigeminals, are very large. They belong to the class of mixed
nerves. Some of their fibers bring sensory impulses from the teeth and ..."