reticulum
noun
- part of ruminant's digestive system
Wiktionary
name
Etymology: Named by the French astronomer Nicolas Louis de Lacaille in 1763. From later Latin rēticulum (“reticle”). The meaning is often wrongly interpreted as "net", which is an older meaning of the Latin root word. Doublet of reticle, reticule, and reticulum.
- A small constellation of the southern summer sky, said to resemble a reticle. It lies between the constellations of Horologium and Dorado.
- Classified as two of 23 "Southern Asterisms" (近南極星區, Jìnnánjíxīngqū)
noun
Etymology: Borrowed from Latin rēticulum (“net”). Doublet of reticle, reticule, and Reticulum.
- A network. For example, the endoplasmic reticulum forms a network of cellular components that functions as a transportation system within the cell.
- A pattern of interconnected objects.
- The second compartment of the stomach of a cow or other ruminant.
“As the young ruminant consumes forages, the reticulum, and particularly the rumen, develop rapidly.”
- The tripe made from the second compartment of the stomach of a cow (or other ruminant).