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Examples of trephine in a Sentence
Word History
earlier trafine, alteration of trapan, variant of trepan entry 2; according to the instrument's originator, suggested by Latin a tribus fīnibus "from the three ends," alluding to the three terminations of the instrument (the two ends of the handle and the cutting end)
Note: The trephine was devised by John Woodall (1570-1643), Surgeon-General of the East India Company. He described it in the second edition of his guide to nautical medicine The Surgeons Mate or Military & Domestique Surgery (London, 1639), p. 313: "…I thought fit here to describe the Trafine, it being an Instrument of my owne composing, which experience will shew, is more compendious and of more facility in the use thereof, for young practitioners in Surgery, then [sic] is the Trapan… and for that it was so fashioned, and first practised by my selfe, I thought fit to put the name of a Trafine upon it (a tribus finibus) from the ends thereof, each being of several uses …." The origin of the form trephine is unclear, though the Oxford English Dictionary, first edition, seems to be incorrect in claiming that it was borrowed from French. It appears in Severall chirurgicall treatises (1676) by the surgeon Richard Wiseman, who preferred the trepan over the trephine, while the French equivalent is apparently not attested before the eighteenth century.
1628, in the meaning defined above
Dictionary Entries Near trephine
Cite this Entry
“Trephine.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/trephine. Accessed 26 Nov. 2024.
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