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bladder
[blad-er]
noun
Anatomy, Zoology.
a membranous sac or organ serving as a receptacle for a fluid or air.
Pathology., a vesicle, blister, cyst, etc., filled with fluid or air.
Botany., an air-filled sac or float, as in certain seaweeds.
something resembling a bladder, as the inflatable lining of a football or basketball.
an air-filled sac, usually made to resemble a club, used for beatings in low comedy, vaudeville, or the like.
bladder
/ ˈblædə /
noun
anatomy a distensible membranous sac, usually containing liquid or gas, esp the urinary bladder
an inflatable part of something
a blister, cyst, vesicle, etc, usually filled with fluid
a hollow vesicular or saclike part or organ in certain plants, such as the bladderwort or bladderwrack
bladder
A sac-shaped muscular organ that stores the urine secreted by the kidneys, found in all vertebrates except birds and the monotremes. In mammals, urine is carried from the kidneys to the bladder by the ureters and is later discharged from the body through the urethra.
An air bladder.
bladder
A stretchable saclike structure in the body that holds fluids. The term is used most often to refer to the urinary bladder, which is part of the excretory system. Another kind of bladder is the gallbladder.
Other Word Forms
- bladdery adjective
- bladderless adjective
- bladderlike adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of bladder1
Example Sentences
Children are being failed by the absence of dedicated bladder and bowel services in some parts of the country, an expert said.
She was found dead at her Dorset home in January from toxicity and bladder damage caused by the Class B drug, an inquest concluded.
Mat has since had multiple surgeries after cancer spread to his bladder and liver but said he was "fortunate" he was "here to tell the tale".
Surgery for deep endometriosis was complex, Mr Misra said, and carried a risk of damaging the delicate tubes connecting the kidneys to the bladder.
Sanders said he had his bladder removed in May to address a cancerous tumor.
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