biceps - Wiktionary, the free dictionary (original) (raw)

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

Biceps brachii; the biceps of the arm.

PIE word
*dwóh₁

From Latin biceps (“double-headed, two peaked”), from bis (“double”) + caput (“head”). See there for more details.

biceps (plural **biceps or bicepses or bicipites)

  1. (anatomy) Any muscle having two heads.
    • 1901, Michael Foster, Lewis E. Shore, Physiology for Beginners, page 73:
      The leg is bent by the action of the flexor muscles situated on the back of the thigh, the chief of these being called the biceps of the leg.
  2. Specifically, the biceps brachii, the flexor of the elbow.
    • 1996, Robert Kennedy, Dwayne Hines II, Animal Arms, page 21:
      The arm muscles are the show muscles of the physique. When someone asks to "see your muscles," they are most likely referring to your arms, and more specifically, your biceps.
  3. (informal) The upper arm, especially the collective muscles of the upper arm.
    • 1964 Dec, “Muscles are His Business”, in Ebony, volume 20, number 2, page 147:
      Today, Stonewall's flexed biceps measure 18 inches around.
    • 2005, Lisa Plumley, Once Upon a Christmas, page 144:
      Biting her lip, she held his biceps for balance and waded farther.
    • 2017, Neil Gaiman, Norse Mythology, Bloomsbury Publishing, page 42:
      Odin examined the arm-ring, then pushed it onto his arm, up high on his biceps.
  4. (prosody) A point in a metrical pattern that can be filled either with one long syllable (a longum) or two short syllables (two brevia)
    • 1987, Martin Litchfield West, Introduction to Greek Metre:
      Also it is advisable to distinguish this ( ˘ ˘ ) — ˘ ˘ — rhythm, where the princeps was probably shorter in duration than the biceps (as in the dactylic hexameter), from true (marching) anapaests, in which they were equal.
    • 2000, James I. Porter, Nietzsche and the Philology of the Future, page 347:
      This means that in the metrical sequence […] recited in ordinary speech rhythm, the princeps occupied a slightly shorter time than the biceps (5:6), and if a long syllable was used to fill the biceps it had to be dragged a little […]

any muscle having two heads

(prosody) point in a metrical poem

Borrowed from Latin biceps (“two-headed”).

biceps m (plural bicepsen, diminutive bicepsje n)

  1. (anatomy) biceps; any two-headed muscle
  2. the biceps brachii
    • 2007, C. A. Bastiaanssen, Anatomie en Fysiologie, page 387:
      De biceps en de triceps zijn elkaars antagonisten.
      The biceps and the triceps are each other's antagonist.

From Latin biceps (“double-headed”).

biceps m (plural **biceps)

  1. (anatomy) biceps (any two-headed muscle)
  2. the biceps brachii
    • 1978, Freddy Buache, Cinéma Anglais, page 154:
      Mais Bronson se définit uniquement par son physique (biceps, démarche souple) et non par la densité de sa présence ce qui limite ses possibilités d’emploi.
      But Bronson is defined only by his physique (biceps, supple gait) and not by the density of his presence which limits his employment possibilities.

aquila biceps (double-headed eagle)

From bis (“twice”) +‎ -ceps (“headed”).

biceps (genitive bicipitis); third-declension one-termination adjective

  1. double-headed, having two heads
    • 8 CE, Ovid, Fasti 1.65:
      Iane biceps, anni tacite labentis origo.
      Two-headed Janus, source of the quietly passing year
  2. (of mountains) having two summits or peaks
    • 8 CE, Ovid, Metamorphoses 2.221:
      Ardet in inmensum geminatis ignibus Aetne
      Parnasosque biceps et Eryx et Cynthus et Othrys.
      Aetna blazes in immense doubled flames
      and twin-peaked Parnasus and Eryx, Cynthus and Othrys
  3. (of swords) double-edged
    • Late 4th century, Jerome [_et al._], transl., edited by Roger Gryson, Biblia Sacra: Iuxta Vulgatam Versionem (Vulgate), 5th edition, Stuttgart: Deutsche Bibelgesellschaft, published 2007, →ISBN, 5:4b:
      Acuta quasi gladius biceps.
      As sharp as a two-edged sword.
  4. (by extension) divided into two parts

Third-declension one-termination adjective.

biceps

Borrowed from German Bizeps.[1] First attested in 1810.[2][3]

biceps m inan

  1. biceps brachii
    Synonyms: bicek, buła
    prężyć bicepsy ― to flex one's biceps

    • 1970, Stanisław Lorentz, Walka o Dobra Kultury, Warszawa 1939-1945, volume 2, page 27:
      I właśnie wtedy przyszło mi na myśl uratowanie prasy powstańczej, którą bardzo troskliwie zbierałem do 2 września, to jest do dnia podpalenia naszego domu, a jednocześnie dnia, kiedy zostałem ranny w prawy biceps.
      And that's exactly when I had the idea to save the uprising press that I very carefully collected until the second of September, that's before the day when our house caught fire, and simultaneously the day when I was injured in my right biceps.
    • 1994, “Dialog: Miesięcznik Poświęcony Dramaturgii Współczesnej”, in Związek Literatów Polskich, page 13:
      Podwija rękaw i napina starczy biceps.
      LEO: Dziękuję, stąd widzę.
      STARZEC (klepie się po bicepsie): Niebywałe!
      He [Starzec] rolls up his sleeve and tenses elderly biceps.
      LEO: Thanks, I see it from here.
      STARZEC (taps himself on the biceps): Unheard of!
  2. ^ Mirosław Bańko, Lidia Wiśniakowska (2021) “biceps”, in Wielki słownik wyrazów obcych, →ISBN

  3. ^ Georg Prochaska (1810) Zasady fizyologii ludzkiej. T. 2‎[1], page 237

  4. ^ biceps in Narodowy Fotokorpus Języka Polskiego

Borrowed from French biceps, from Latin biceps (“two-headed”).

biceps m (plural bicepși)

  1. biceps; any two-headed muscle
  2. the biceps brachii

From Latin biceps (“two-headed”).

bìceps m (Cyrillic spelling бѝцепс)

  1. biceps