Cephalic

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Cephalic means pertaining to the head. The English suffixes -cephalic and -cephaly mean "relating to the head", as does the word when used as a prefix. The most common use is in relation to the anatomical head, though words ending which such a suffix can also relate to other meanings of "head".

The word cephalic has Latin and Greek origins: cephalicus and kephalikos (κεφαλος) respectively, both meaning "head". The antonym is caudal.

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There are many congenital disorders relating to the head which are known as cephalic disorders.

Bicephalic (alternatively dicephalic) is an adjective attributed most commonly to a two-headed animal. Bicephalic animals frequently appear in heraldic representation. Prefixes bi and di mean "two", and more than two heads is polycephalic, using the prefix poly (many).

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