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  2. What does the noun mandible mean? There are three meanings listed in OED's entry for the noun mandible. See ‘Meaning & use’ for definitions, usage, and quotation evidence. mandible has developed meanings and uses in subjects including. fish (Middle English) anatomy (Middle English) birds (late 1600s) insects (1810s) See meaning & use.

  3. Nov 15, 2018 · mandible. (n.) late 14c., "jaw, jawbone," from Late Latin mandibula "jaw," from Latin mandere "to chew," which is perhaps from PIE root *mendh- "to chew" (source also of Greek mastax "the mouth, that with which one chews; morsel, that which is chewed," masasthai "to chew," mastikhan "to gnash the teeth").

  4. Definition of mandible noun in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  5. Aug 25, 2007 · Mandible comes from the Latin mandereto chew with; –bula by means of. Early anatomists used the word maxilla for both jaws as L maxilla means just jaw bone and is not at all specific to...

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  6. MANDIBLE definition: 1. in a person or animal, the lower jaw bone 2. in insects, one of the two parts of the mouth used…. Learn more.

  7. noun. 1. the lower jawbone in vertebrates. See jaw (sense 1) 2. either of a pair of mouthparts in insects and other arthropods that are usually used for biting and crushing food. 3. ornithology. either the upper or the lower part of the bill, esp the lower part. Collins English Dictionary.

  8. In vertebrates (including humans), the mandible is the lower, hinged part of the jaw; in birds, both the top and bottom sections of the beak are called mandibles. The Latin root is mandere, "to chew," and chewing is the main function of the mandible, which holds your lower teeth in place and swings freely up and down.

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