NOUN
- (anatomy) a fold of dura mater that covers the cerebellum and supports the occipital lobes of the cerebrum
How To Use tentorium In A Sentence
- The occipital lobe is positioned on a process of the dura mater, known as the tentorium cerebelli, which divides the cerebrum from the cerebellum. CreationWiki - Recent changes [en]
- The tentorium cerebelli is continuous with the posterior and anterior petroclinoid ligaments.
- The posterior area is concave, directed medialward as well as downward, and is named the tentorial surface, since it rests upon the tentorium cerebelli, which intervenes between it and the upper surface of the cerebellum. IX. Neurology. 4c. The Fore-brain or Prosencephalon
- The occipital lobe is positioned on a process of the dura mater, known as the tentorium cerebelli, which divides the cerebellum. CreationWiki - Recent changes [en]
- The free front margin of the tentorium fits closely round the back of the brain stem; the brain stem can be damaged, for example if a tumour growing above or below the ‘tent’ encroaches on this narrow space.
- Such a differentiation might not even be possible; as more is learned about the biological bases of mental illness, it appears that the tentorium is not the dividing line we once believed it to be.
- Habebat etiam semper capellam Christianorum ante maius, tentorium suum, vbi cantant Clerici public� et apert�, ac pulsant ad horas, vt c鎡eri Christiani secundum mores Gr鎐orum, quantacunque sit ibi multitudo Tartarorum, vel etiam aliorum hominum. The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation
- The occipital lobe is positioned on a process of the dura mater, known as the tentorium cerebelli, which divides the [[cerebrum]] from the [[cerebellum]] CreationWiki - Recent changes [en]
- For there is a very marked groove in every such skull, as in the human skull -- which indicates the line of attachment of what is termed the 'tentorium' -- a sort of parchment-like shelf, or partition, which, in the recent state, is interposed between the cerebrum and cerebellum, and prevents the former from pressing upon the latter. On the Relations of Man to the Lower Animals
- Habebat etiam semper capellam Christianorum ante maius, tentorium suum, vbi cantant Clerici publicè et apertè, ac pulsant ad horas, vt cæteri Christiani secundum mores Græcorum, quantacunque sit ibi multitudo Tartarorum, vel etiam aliorum hominum. The long and wonderful voyage of Frier Iohn de Plano Carpini