English edit

Etymology edit

From dolicho- +‎ cephalic, hence literally roughly “long-headed”.

Adjective edit

dolichocephalic (comparative more dolichocephalic, superlative most dolichocephalic)

  1. (of a person or animal) Having a head that is long from front to back (relative to its width from left to right).
    • 1981, William Irwin Thompson, The Time Falling Bodies Take to Light: Mythology, Sexuality and the Origins of Culture, London: Rider/Hutchinson & Co., page 153:
      Just how cosmopolitan the town was is clear from the fact that two different races are found buried in the graves: the dolichocephalic Eurafrican, and the brachycephalic Proto-Mediterranean.

Translations edit

Noun edit

dolichocephalic (plural dolichocephalics)

  1. A dolichocephalic person.

Related terms edit

References edit

  • William H. Tucker, The Science and Politics of Racial Research,[1] University of Illinois Press (1996), →ISBN, page 23: Also a subject of extensive investigation was the cephalic index, a measurement of the general shape of the skull, defined as the ratio of its breadth to its length multiplied by one hundred to eliminate the decimal point. Ratios below seventy-five indicated skulls that were long and narrow, termed “dolichocephalic”; those between seventy-five and eighty, slightly broader or “mesocephalic”; and even rounder heads with ratios above eighty were called “brachycephalic.”