From Middle English coronal, from Anglo-Norman coronal, from Latin corōnālis (“related to a crown”), from corōna (“crown”).
coronal (comparative more coronal, superlative most coronal)
- Relating to a crown or coronation.
- (astronomy) Relating to the corona of a star.
2013 July 28, Megan Gannon, “Spacecraft Sees Giant 'Hole' In the Sun”, in news.yahoo.com[1], retrieved 2013-07-29:Coronal holes are darker, cooler regions of the sun's atmosphere, or corona, containing little solar material. In these gaps, magnetic field lines whip out into the solar wind rather than looping back to the sun's surface. Coronal holes can affect space weather, as they send solar particles streaming off the sun about three times faster than the slower wind unleashed elsewhere from the sun's atmosphere, according to a description from NASA.
- (botany) Relating to the corona of a flower.
- (phonetics) Relating to a sound made with the tip or blade of the tongue.
- (anatomy) Relating to the coronal plane that divides a body into dorsal (back) and ventral (front).
- (dentistry) Relating to the external (supragingival) portion of the tooth.
- (urology) Relating to the corona glandis.
- (dentistry location adjectives) anterior, apical, apicocoronal, axial, buccal, buccoapical, buccocervical, buccogingival, buccolabial, buccolingual, bucco-occlusal, buccopalatal, cervical, coronal, coronoapical, distal, distoapical, distobuccal, distocervical, distocoronal, distofacial, distogingival, distoincisal, distolingual, disto-occlusal, distoclusal, distocclusal, distopalatal, facial, gingival, incisal, incisocervical, inferior, labial, lingual, linguobuccal, linguo-occlusal, mandibular, maxillary, mesial, mesioapical, mesiobuccal, mesiocervical, mesiocoronal, mesiodistal, mesiofacial, mesioincisal, mesiogingival, mesiolingual, mesio-occlusal, mesioclusal, mesiocclusal, mesiopalatal, occlusal, palatal, posterior, proximal, superior, vestibular (Category: en:Dentistry) [edit]
- (phonetics): labial, dorsal, radical, laryngeal
produced with tip or blade of tongue
coronal (plural coronals)
- A crown or coronet.
1485, Sir Thomas Malory, chapter V, in Le Morte Darthur, book V:Therfore aryse and dresse the thow gloton / For this day shall thou dye of my hand / Thenne the gloton anone starte vp and tooke a grete clubbe in his hand / and smote at the kynge that his coronal fylle to the erthe- (please add an English translation of this quotation)
- A wreath or garland of flowers.
1862, Edward McDermott, The Popular Guide to the International Exhibition of 1862, Cambridge University Press, published 2014:The bowl is in the Renaissance style, with winged figures supporting coronals and wreaths of flowers, and on the edge is an emblematic figure pouring out water.
1911, George Sterling, Duandon[2]:Where, darker for the sky's unclouded dome, The waves took sudden coronals of foam
- The frontal bone, over which the ancients wore their coronae or garlands.
1947, Hans Grüneberg, Animal Genetics and Medicine, page 190:Oxycephaly results from the fusion of both coronal sutures and of the sagittal suture; trigonocephaly from a fusion of both coronals; […]
- (phonetics) A consonant produced with the tip or blade of the tongue.
2011, Mirco Ghini, Asymmetries in the Phonology of Miogliola, page 34:This structurally accounts for a number of phenomena that treat coronals asymetrically with respect to other places of articulation.
consonant produced with tip or blade of tongue
- “coronal”, in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: G. & C. Merriam, 1913, →OCLC.
- “coronal”, in The Century Dictionary […], New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911, →OCLC.
- “coronal”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.
Coronal consonant on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Anatomical terms of location on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
coronal (plural coronals)
- Alternative form of cronel (“lance-part”)
1848, The Archaeological Journal, page 227:By Mr. Neville's kindness an accurate drawing of this relic has been obtained, and, considering the circumstances of its discovery, it has been conjectured that it may have been the coronal of a tilting lance.
1864, Central Committee of the British Archaeological Association for the Encouragement and Prosecution of Researches into the Arts and Monuments of the Early and Middle Ages, The Archaeological Journal, page 177:[…] the proper stroke was to knock off the salade, or bear it off in triumph on the three-pronged coronal of the lance.
1908, Bertram Edward Sargeaunt, Weapons: A Brief Discourse on Hand-weapons Other Than Fire-arms, page 26:The tilting lance differed from a war lance in that it possessed a coronal instead of a point. The coronal consisted of […]
coronal (plural coronals)
- Obsolete form of colonel.