You searched for: “chest
Units related to: “chest
(Latin: breast, chest)
(Latin: scrinium, a case, chest, box, or receptacle; especially, one in which are deposited sacred relics, bones of a saint, or sacred books and documents)
(Greek: chest, breast, sternum, the breast bone)
(Greek: chest, breast)
(Greek > Latin: treasure, treasury, storehouse, chest; a treasury of words)
(Greek: thorax, chest [part of the body between the neck and the abdomen; "breastplate, breast, chest"])
(Latin: a small box or chest; repository, case; enveloping or surrounding a structure)
(Greek: breast; the front of the human chest and either of two soft rounded organs on each side of the chest in women and men; however, with women the organs are more prominent and produce milk after childbirth; also, a milk-producing gland in mammals that corresponds to the human breast)
(Greek > Latin: strike, stroke, blow, wound; beat the chest; lament loudly [while beating the chest]; pestilence)
(Greek: side, rib; a thin membrane with two layers that line the chest cavity)
(Latin: internal organs; all that is under the skin, all parts in the body except flesh or muscles; entrails; any large interior organ in any of the three great cavities of the body; specifically, those within the chest; such as, the heart or lungs; or in the abdomen; such as, the liver, pancreas, and intestines; and in the head; such as, the brain)
Word Entries at Get Words: “chest
chest
The area of the body located between the neck and the abdomen.

The chest contains the lungs, the heart, and part of the aorta.

The walls of the chest are supported by the dorsal vertebrae, the ribs, and the sternum.

Word Entries at Get Words containing the term: “chest
chest X-ray
Commonly used to detect abnormalities in the lungs, but it can also detect abnormalities in the heart, aorta, and the bones of the thoracic area.