Definify.com

Webster 1913 Edition


Cambium

Cam′bi-um

,
Noun.
[LL.
cambium
exchange, fr. L.
cambire
to exchange. It was supposed that cambium was sap changing into wood.]
1.
(Bot.)
A series of formative cells lying outside of the wood proper and inside of the inner bark. The growth of new wood takes place in the cambium, which is very soft.
2.
(Med.)
A fancied nutritive juice, formerly supposed to originate in the blood, to repair losses of the system, and to promote its increase.
Dunglison.

Definition 2024


cambium

cambium

English

Noun

cambium (plural cambiums or cambia)

  1. (botany) A layer of cells between the xylem and the phloem that is responsible for the secondary growth of roots and stems.
    • 1863, Harland Coultas, What may be learned from a tree
      During winter we perceive no change in the cells of the cambium layer, which are filled with nutritive matter […].
  2. (obsolete) One of the humours formerly believed to nourish the bodily organs.
    • 1621, Robert Burton, The Anatomy of Melancholy, Bk.I, New York, 2001, p.147:
      The radical or innate is daily supplied by nourishment, which some call cambium, and make those secondary humours of ros and gluten to maintain it […].

Translations


Latin

Etymology

From Gaulish cambion, *kambyom (change), from Proto-Celtic *kambos (twisted, crooked), from Proto-Indo-European *(s)ḱh₂mbós, *(s)kh₂mbós (crooked), from *(s)kh₂emb- (to bend, curve). Cognate with Ancient Greek σκαμβός (skambós, crooked), Old Irish camm (crooked), Welsh cam (crooked), Breton kamm (crooked), Old High German skimph (joke, amusement, pastime), Swedish skumpa (to limp), Persian خم (kham, curve, crook). More at change.

Pronunciation

  • (Classical) IPA(key): /ˈkam.bi.um/, [ˈkam.bi.ũ]

Noun

cambium n (genitive cambiī); second declension

  1. (Late Latin) A change
  2. (Late Latin) cambium

Derived terms

Descendants

References


Spanish

Etymology

From Late Latin cambium

Noun

cambium m (plural cambiums)

  1. cambium