Fromneo- +plasm, afterGermanNeoplasma.
neoplasm (pluralneoplasms)
- (pathology, oncology) An abnormal new growth of disorganized tissue inanimals orplants.
1947, William Lincoln Ballenger, Howard Charles Ballenger, John Jacob Ballenger,Diseases of the Nose, Throat and Ear, page208:Other and less common causes for an oromaxillary fistula are infections, cysts andneoplasms of the maxilla which may destroy the intervening bone, resulting in a fistula between the maxillary sinus and the oral cavity.
2017, Gaballah AH, Jensen CT, “Angiosarcoma: clinical and imaging features from head to toe”, inThe British journal of radiology, volume90, number1075, British Institute of Radiology,→DOI,→PMID:Angiosarcoma is the most-common differentiated malignantneoplasm of theheart and accounts for 10–15% of primary cardiacmalignancies.
- For more quotations using this term, seeCitations:neoplasm.
abnormal new growth of disorganized tissue
- Bulgarian:тумор (bg) m(tumor)
- Chinese:
- Mandarin:新生物 (zh)(xīnshēngwù)
- Dutch:neoplasma (nl) n,tumor (nl) m,gezwel (nl) n
- Esperanto:neoplasmo
- French:néoplasme (fr) m,tumeur (fr) f
- German:Blastom n,Geschwulst (de) f,Neoplasie (de) f,Neoplasma (de) n,Neubildung (de) f
- Greek:νεοπλασία (el) f(neoplasía),νεόπλασμα (el) n(neóplasma),όγκος (el) m(ógkos)
- Irish:neoplasma m
- Italian:neoplasma (it) m
- Japanese:新生物(しんせいぶつ, shinseibutsu)
- Occitan:neoplasma m
- Russian:новообразова́ние (ru) n(novoobrazovánije),неопла́зма (ru) f(neoplázma),о́пухоль (ru) f(ópuxolʹ)(tumor, swelling),бласто́ма (ru) f(blastóma)(blastoma)
- Spanish:neoplasma m
- Swedish:neoplasm (sv) c,tumör (sv) c
- Turkish:neoplazma (tr),tümör (tr)
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Borrowed fromFrenchnéoplasme.
neoplasm n (pluralneoplasme)
- neoplasm