litho-, lith-, -lith, -lithic, -lite, -liths, -lites
(Greek: stone, rock; hard consolidated mineral matter; hard matter formed from mineral and earth material; hard substance that is solid)
						stercolith, stercorolith					
					
						1. A hard stony mass of feces.
2. A hard mass of fecal matter in the intestine.
									2. A hard mass of fecal matter in the intestine.
A stercolith can obstruct the appendix, leading to appendicitis. Fecaliths also can obstruct diverticuli. Also called: coprolith and fecalith.
						tonsillith					
					
						tonsillolith					
					
						tonsolith					
					
						tricholith					
					
						1. A concretion on the hair; the lesion of piedra.
									Piedra is either of two diseases resulting from fungal infection of the hair shafts. Black piedra occurs mainly in and on the hairs of the scalp and is caused by piedraia hortae; white piedra occurs in and on the hairs of the scalp, beard, moustache and genital areas and is caused by trichosporon beigelii.
2. A calcified hair ball within the stomach or intestines.
						trilith, trilithon					
					
						A massive prehistoric stone structure, resembling a doorway, consisting of two vertical stones with a third supported horizontally by the other two.					
									
						ultrasonic lithotresis					
					
						A procedure in which ultrasonic waves are used to facilitate the removal of urinary stones.					
									
						ureterolith					
					
						ureterolithotomy					
					
						The surgical incision and removal of a stone (calculus) lodged in a ureter.					
									
						urolith					
					
						urolithiasis					
					
						Presence of calculi in the urinary system.					
									
						urolithology					
					
						The branch of medicine concerned with the formation, composition, effects, and removal of urinary calculi or "stones".					
									
						uterolith					
					
						xenolith					
					
						xerolith					
					
						1. Another term for the process of printing a lithograph on a hard, flat surface. Originally the printing surface was a flat piece of stone that was etched with acid to form a surface that would selectively transfer ink to the paper; the stone has now been replaced, in general, with a metal plate.
2. A printing process in which the image to be printed is rendered on a flat surface, as on sheet zinc or aluminum, and treated to retain ink while the nonimage areas are treated to repel ink.
									2. A printing process in which the image to be printed is rendered on a flat surface, as on sheet zinc or aluminum, and treated to retain ink while the nonimage areas are treated to repel ink.
 
		
