释义 |
iliacus Anat.|ɪˈlaɪəkəs| [late L.: see iliac a. (n.).] = iliac muscle (s.v. iliac a. 2). Also † iliacus internus, iliacus muscle.
1615H. Crooke Descr. Body Man x. vi. 744 The thighes are each of them bent by two [muscles] called Psoas and Iliacus. Ibid. xxxviii. 811 The second Bender is called Iliacus internus the inward haunch-Muscle. 1726W. Cheselden Anat. Humane Body (ed. 3) ii. ii. 123 Iliacus internus, arises from the concave part of the ilium, and from its lower edge, and passing over the ilium near the os pubis, joins the former muscle [sc. psoas magnus], and is inserted with it, to be employed in the same action. 1733G. Douglas tr. Winslow's Anat. Expos. Struct. Human Body I. iii. x. 53 The Iliacus and Psoas thus united pass under the Ligamentum Falloppii. 1875Encycl. Brit. I. 840/2 The thigh can be bent on the abdomen by the action of the psoas, iliacus, and pectineus, which lie in front of the joint. 1967G. M. Wyburn et al. Conc. Anat. vi. 158 The iliacus and psoas muscles pass behind the inguinal ligament and the iliacus joins the tendon of the psoas. |