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corium
[kawr-ee-uhm, kohr-]
noun
plural
coriaAnatomy, Zoology., dermis.
Entomology., the thickened, leathery, basal portion of a hemelytron.
corium
/ ˈkɔːrɪəm /
noun
Also called: derma. dermis. the deep inner layer of the skin, beneath the epidermis, containing connective tissue, blood vessels, and fat
entomol the leathery basal part of the forewing of hemipterous insects
Word History and Origins
Origin of corium1
Word History and Origins
Origin of corium1
Example Sentences
In the event of a meltdown, special vents would keep 99.9% of released radioactive particles out of the atmosphere, and corium shields would block molten fuel from breaching the reactors’ primary containment vessels.
Its device is focused on the idea of molten corium spreading along a sufficiently large area equipped with a special pipe system for basement cooling.
Somewhat magnified. sc, scutellum; co, cl, m, corium, clavus and membrane of forewing.
The formation of a cicatrix is evidently due to the intensity of the process in certain exceptional lesions, as a result of which the papill� of the corium are superficially destroyed.
It is very profusely distributed in the corium of the skin.
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