Sudoriferous

Word SUDORIFEROUS
Character 12
Hyphenation su dor if er ous
Pronunciations N/A

Definitions and meanings of "Sudoriferous"

What do we mean by sudoriferous?

Producing or secreting sweat. adjective

Bearing or producing sweat; sudoriparous.

Producing, or secreting, sweat; sudoriparous. adjective

Small convoluted tubular glands which are situated in the subcutaneous tissues and discharge by minute orifices in the surface of the skin; the sweat glands. adjective

Sweaty or sweating, bearing sweat adjective

Sweaty or sweating, bearing sweat.

Synonyms and Antonyms for Sudoriferous

  • Antonyms for sudoriferous
  • Sudoriferous antonyms not found!

The word "sudoriferous" in example sentences

You know-as in sweaty, steamy, dripping, sticky, sudoriferous cinema get your mind out of the gutter! ❋ Unknown (2008)

In the axilla there are numerous hairs and many sudoriferous and sebaceous glands. ❋ Unknown (1918)

The arteries supplying the skin form a net-work in the subcutaneous tissue, and from this net-work branches are given off to supply the sudoriferous glands, the hair follicles, and the fat. ❋ Unknown (1918)

The Appendages of the Skin—The appendages of the skin are the nails, the hairs, and the sudoriferous and sebaceous glands with their ducts. ❋ Unknown (1918)

Each ridge contains two rows of papillæ, between which the ducts of the sudoriferous glands pass outward to open on the summit of the ridge. ❋ Unknown (1918)

Body of a sudoriferous-gland cut in various deirections.a. Longitudinal section of the proximal part of the coiled tube. b. ❋ Unknown (1918)

On the surface of the former layer are sensitive and vascular papillæ within, or beneath it, are certain organs with special functions: namely, the sudoriferous and sebaceous glands, and the hair follicles. ❋ Unknown (1918)

The cellular structures of the sudoriferous and sebaceous glands are formed from the ectoderm, while the connective tissue and bloodvessels are derived from the mesoderm. ❋ Unknown (1918)

Fine tubular prolongations are continued from this layer into the ducts of the sudoriferous and sebaceous glands. ❋ Unknown (1918)

Near the attachment of the eyelashes are the openings of a number of glands, the ciliary glands, arranged in several rows close to the free margin of the lid; they are regarded as enlarged and modified sudoriferous glands. ❋ Unknown (1918)

In the thick subcutaneous tissue of the cartilaginous part of the meatus are numerous ceruminous glands, which secrete the ear-wax; their structure resembles that of the sudoriferous glands. ❋ Unknown (1918)

It forms the whole of the nervous system, the epidermis of the skin, the lining cells of the sebaceous, sudoriferous, and mammary glands, the hairs and nails, the epithelium of the nose and adjacent air sinuses, and that of the cheeks and roof of the mouth. ❋ Unknown (1918)

It consists of a small island of skin containing sebaceous and sudoriferous glands, and is the source of the whitish secretion which constantly collects in this region. ❋ Unknown (1918)

Over the medial side and front of the forearm the skin is thin and smooth, and contains few hairs but many sudoriferous glands; over the lateral side and back of the arm and forearm it is thicker, denser, and contains more hairs but fewer sudoriferous glands. ❋ Unknown (1918)

The ceruminous glands of the external acoustic meatus and the ciliary glands at the margins of the eyelids are modified sudoriferous glands. ❋ Unknown (1918)

Free nerve-endings occur chiefly in the epidermis and in the epithelium covering certain mucous membranes; they are well seen also in the stratified squamous epithelium of the cornea, and are also found in the root-sheaths and papillæ of the hairs, and around the bodies of the sudoriferous glands. ❋ Unknown (1918)

The _Sebaceous Glands_, which are placed in the true skin, are less abundant where the sudoriferous glands are most numerous, and _vice versa_. ❋ Ray Vaughn Pierce (1877)

The general cutaneous and mucous surfaces exhale, as well as absorb; thus the skin, by means of its sudoriferous glands, exhales moisture, and is at the same time as before stated, a powerful absorbent. ❋ Ray Vaughn Pierce (1877)

Naturally, in harmony with this evolution of the mouth, the salivary glands belong genetically to one series with the sudoriferous, sebaceous, and mammary glands. ❋ Ernst Heinrich Philipp August Haeckel (1876)

Some of the glands, such as the sudoriferous, do not ramify (Figure 2.284 efg). ❋ Ernst Heinrich Philipp August Haeckel (1876)

Cross Reference for Sudoriferous

What does sudoriferous mean?

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