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coagulum
co·ag·u·lum C0432300 (kō-ăg′yə-ləm)n. pl. co·ag·u·la (-lə) A coagulated mass, as of blood; a clot. [Latin coāgulum, coagulator, rennet, from cōgere, to condense : co-, co- + agere, to drive; see ag- in Indo-European roots.]coagulum (kəʊˈæɡjʊləm) n, pl -la (-lə) any coagulated mass; clot; curd[C17: from Latin: curdling agent; see coagulate]co•ag•u•lum (koʊˈæg yə ləm) n., pl. -la (-lə). any coagulated mass; precipitate; clump; clot. [1650–60; < Latin: binding agent, rennet <co- co- + agere to drive, do (see agent)] ThesaurusNoun | 1. | coagulum - a lump of material formed from the content of a liquidclotchunk, clod, glob, lump, clump, ball - a compact mass; "a ball of mud caught him on the shoulder"thrombus - a blood clot formed within a blood vessel and remaining attached to its place of originembolus - an abnormal particle (e.g. an air bubble or part of a clot) circulating in the blood | EncyclopediaSeeclotcoagulum
clot [klot] 1. a semisolidified mass, as of blood or lymph; called also coagulum.2. coagulate. See also clotting.blood clot a coagulum in the blood stream formed of an aggregation of blood factors, primarily platelets, and fibrin with entrapment of cellular elements; see also thrombus. Some authorities differentiate thrombus formation from simple coagulation or clot formation. Called also cruor.co·ag·u·lum, pl. co·ag·u·la (kō-ag'yū-lŭm, -lă), A clot or a curd; a soft, nonrigid, insoluble mass formed when a solution undergoes coagulation. [L. a means of coagulating, rennet] coagulum (kō-ăg′yə-ləm)n. pl. coagu·la (-lə) A coagulated mass, as of blood; a clot.co·ag·u·lum, pl. coagula (kō-ag'yū-lŭm, -lă) A clot or a curd; a soft, nonrigid, insoluble mass formed when a solution undergoes coagulation. [L. a means of coagulating, rennet]coagulum
Synonyms for coagulumnoun a lump of material formed from the content of a liquidSynonymsRelated Words- chunk
- clod
- glob
- lump
- clump
- ball
- thrombus
- embolus
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