obstetrician - Wiktionary, the free dictionary (original) (raw)
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From obstetrics + -ician.
obstetrician (plural obstetricians)
- (medicine) A physician who specializes in childbirth.
Synonyms: obstetrist, tocologist- 2001, Ellen Gruenbaum, The Female Circumcision Controversy: An Anthropological Perspective:
The preference for tightness during intercourse is so well known in Western culture that U.S. obstetricians even have a term for the extra stitch they often perform when doing episiotomy repairs following childbirth: the "husband's stitch." The husband's stitch is intended to produce a smaller vaginal opening, to counteract the natural stretching of the tissues from sexual activity and childbirth and even to make the opening more constricted than it might have been before. - 2007 July 20, Dave Caldwell, “Williamsport, Pa.: Home of True Small Ball”, in The New York Times[1], archived from the original on 26 November 2022:
“Each time they’d build, they’d try to outbuild all the rest of them,” said Dr. Randall F. Hipple, a retired obstetrician who helped establish a seven-block stretch of the street as a National Historic District.
- 2001, Ellen Gruenbaum, The Female Circumcision Controversy: An Anthropological Perspective:
a physician who specializes in childbirth
- Armenian: մանկաբարձ (hy) (mankabarj)
- Belarusian: акушэ́р m (akušér), акушэ́рка f (akušérka)
- Bulgarian: акуше́р m (akušér), акуше́рка (bg) f (akušérka)
- Chinese:
Mandarin: 產科醫生 / 产科医生 (chǎnkē yīshēng) - Czech: porodník (cs) m, porodnice (cs) f
- Danish: fødselshjælper c
- Dutch: gynaecoloog (nl), verloskundearts m or f, obstetrisch gynaecoloog m or f, obstetricus
- Finnish: synnytyslääkäri
- French: obstétricien (fr) m, obstétricienne (fr) f, accoucheur (fr) m, accoucheuse (fr) f, gynécologue (fr) m or f
- Georgian: მეანი (ka) (meani)
- German: Geburtshelfer (de) m, Geburtshelferin (de) f, Entbindungspfleger (de) m, Entbindungspflegerin (de) f
- Greek: μαιευτήρας (el) m or f (maieftíras)
- Hungarian: szülész (hu)
- Irish: cnáimhseoir m, obstatraí m
- Italian: ostetrico (it) m
- Japanese: 産科医 (ja) (さんかい, sankai)
- Kazakh: акушер (akuşer)
- Korean: 산과의(産科醫) (ko) (san'gwaui)
- Kyrgyz: акушер (ky) (akuşer), акушерка (ky) (akuşerka) (female)
- Macedonian: акуше́р m (akušér), акуше́рка f (akušérka)
- Māori: mātanga hapūtanga
- Norwegian:
Bokmål: fødselshjelper m
Nynorsk: fødselshjelpar m - Persian:
Iranian Persian: دُکْتُرِ زایِمان (doktor-e zâyemân), پِزِشْکِ زایِمان (pezešk-e zâyemân) - Polish: położnik (pl) m, położna (pl) f, akuszer (pl) m, akuszerka (pl) f
- Portuguese: obstetra (pt) m or f
- Romanian: obstetrician (ro) m, obstetriciană (ro) f
- Russian: акуше́р (ru) m (akušér), акуше́рка (ru) f (akušérka), гинеко́лог (ru) m (ginekólog) (gynaecologist)
- Serbo-Croatian:
Cyrillic: аку̀ше̄р m, аку̀ше̄рка f
Latin: akùšēr (sh) m, akùšērka (sh) f - Slovak: pôrodník m, pôrodníčka f
- Slovene: porodničar (sl) m, porodničarka f
- Spanish: tocólogo (es) m, tocóloga f, obstetra m or f
- Swahili: daktari wa uzazi
- Swedish: obstetriker c, ackuschör (sv) c
- Tajik: акушер (akušer)
- Telugu: ప్రసూతివైద్యుడు (prasūtivaidyuḍu)
- Thai: สูติแพทย์
- Turkish: doğumcu, doğum uzmanı
- Turkmen: akuşer (tk), akuşerka (tk) (female)
- Ukrainian: акуше́р (uk) m (akušér), акуше́рка (uk) f (akušérka)
- Uyghur: ئاكۇشېر (akushër), ئاكۇشېركا (akushërka) (female)
- Uzbek: akusher (uz), akusherka (uz) (female)
- Yiddish: אָבסטעטריקער m (obstetriker), אָבסטעטריקערין f (obstetrikerin)
Borrowed from French obstétricien.
obstetrician m (plural obstetricieni)