malacia

English

Etymology

From Latin malacia, from Ancient Greek μαλακία (malakía, softness, sickness).

Noun

malacia (countable and uncountable, plural malacias)

  1. (medicine, pathology) Abnormal softening of organs or tissues of the human body. [from 19th c.]
    • 1860, Rudolf Ludwig Karl Virchow, Cellular Pathology as Based Upon Physiological and Pathological Histology, page 318:
      As soon, namely, as a process of this sort sets in in a compound organ, as for example, a muscle, a palpable myo-malacia is certainly produced when all the muscular elements at a given point are at once affected; but it happens far more frequently that, in the course of a muscle, only a comparatively small number of primitive fasciculi are affected, whilst the others remain almost intact.
  2. (medicine, obsolete) An abnormal craving for certain types of food. [from 17th c.]

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Italian

Etymology

From Latin malacia, from Ancient Greek μαλακία (malakía, softness, sickness).

Noun

malacia f (plural malacie)

  1. (pathology) malacia

Derived terms

Anagrams

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