English

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Etymology

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From Latin internectere (to bind together), from inter (between) + nectere (to fasten).

Noun

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internection (plural internections)

  1. (obsolete) intimate connection
    • 1881, Montrose A. Pallen, “The Reparative Surgery of the Genital Tracts”, in Transactions of the 1st, 2nd, 4th-17th congress. International congress of medicine:
      The faulty internections of the bladder, vagina, rectum, uterus, oviducts, and ovaries, indicate certain relations that are invariably attended with either dyspareunia, dysmenorrhæa, sterility, or dystocia

References

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