English

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Etymology

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(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)

Pronunciation

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  • IPA(key): /ˈzaɪɡənjʊə(ɹ)/

Noun

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zygoneure (plural zygoneures)

  1. (anatomy, obsolete) A neuron that connects to other nerve cells.
    • 1895, Science[1], volume 2, page 778:
      The cells of the nerve roots (cellules radiculaires, von Gehuchten), could be called rhizoneures, the columnar cells (cellules des cordons), aromeures; commissural cells (cellules des voies courtes) would be zygoneures; long-path cells like those of the pyramidal tract (cellules des voies longues) would be maerodromic neures, from Gr. μακρς, δρόμος, long course.
    • 1896, New York Medical Journal[2], volume 63, page 374:
      Zygoneures lie mostly within the cerebro spinal axis, some cells of the sympathetic system offering an exception.
    • 1976, The Soviet Journal of Marine Biology, page 164:
      The absence of a zygoneure, which is characteristic for the majority of Rissoidea, can be considered a consequence of decreased body measurements and results in a centralization of the nervous system.