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Deutsche Gaumen Synonyme

gaumen  

Englische palatine Synonyme

palatine Definition

Maxillo-palatine
(a.) Pertaining to the maxillary and palatine regions of the skull
Palatine
(a.) Of or pertaining to a palace, or to a high officer of a palace
Palatine
(n.) One invested with royal privileges and rights within his domains
Palatine
(n.) The Palatine hill in Rome.
Palatine
(a.) Of or pertaining to the palate.
Palatine
(n.) A palatine bone.

palatine Bedeutung

palatine raphe the seam at the middle of the hard palate
palatine
palatine bone
os palatinum
either of two irregularly shaped bones that form the back of the hard palate and helps to form the nasal cavity and the floor of the orbits
tonsil
palatine tonsil
faucial tonsil
tonsilla
either of two masses of lymphatic tissue one on each side of the oral pharynx
palatine artery
arteria palatina
one of several arteries supplying the face
palatine vein
vena palatina
a vein that drains the region of the palate and empties into the facial vein
county palatine the territory of a count palatine
Palatine the most important of the Seven Hills of Rome, supposedly the location of the first settlement and the site of many imperial palaces
count palatine a count who exercised royal authority in his own domain
palatine
palsgrave
(Middle Ages) the lord of a palatinate who exercised sovereign powers over his lands
palatine any of various important officials in ancient Rome
palatine of or relating to a palace
palatine of or relating to a count palatine and his royal prerogatives
palatal
palatine
relating to or lying near the palate, palatal index, the palatine tonsils
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A palatine or palatinus is a high-level official attached to imperial or royal courts in Europe since Roman times. The term palatinus was first used in Ancient Rome for chamberlains of the Emperor due to their association with the Palatine Hill. The imperial palace guard, after the rise of Constantine I, were also called the Scholae Palatinae for the same reason. In the Early Middle Ages the title became attached to courts beyond the imperial one; the highest level of officials in the Roman Catholic Church were called the judices palatini. Later the Merovingian and Carolingian dynasties had counts palatine, as did the Holy Roman Empire. Related titles were used in Hungary, Poland, Lithuania, the German Empire, and the Duchy of Burgundy, while England, Ireland, and parts of British North America referred to rulers of counties palatine as palatines.