Hindgut meaning in Urdu
Hindgut Sentence
Hindgut Definitions
1) Hindgut : جانور کی پچھلی آنت : (noun) the caudal part of the alimentary canal in vertebrate embryos.
Useful Words
Bowel : آنت , Enteron : آنت , Colicky : گیس کی بیماری سے متاثر , Digestible : قابل ہضم , Breadbasket : معدہ , Tail : دم , Jaw : جبڑا , Inversion : یوٹرس کا الٹ جانا , Medulla Spinalis : ریڑھ کی ہڈی , Caul : غلاف سر جنین , Shark : شارک مچھلی , Eyeball : آنکھ کا دیدہ , Abdomen : پیٹ , Peptic Ulcer : زخم ہاضم , Polydactyl : بہت سی انگلیاں اور انگوٹھے رکھنے والا , Tetrapod : چوپایہ , Agnathan : بے جبڑا مچھلی , Heterostraci : ناپید مچھلی , Headfish : سمندری مچھلی , Cerebellum : دمیغ , Fetus : جنین , Reptile : رینگنے والا جانور , Pelvic Fin : مچھلی کے پیٹ کے دو پروں میں سے ایک , Mammal : دودھ پلانے والے جانور , Blood Platelet : خون کو گاڑھا رکھنے والا قدرتی مادہ , Hip : پیڑو , Rickettsia : چھوٹے پلیومورفک جسمیے جو طفیلی ہوتے ہیں اور آرتھرو پوڈز کی گٹ کے خلیوں میں قدرتی طور پر رہتے ہیں بعض ممالیہ جانوروں اور آدمی میں امراض پیدا کرتے ہیں , Ship Canal : جہاز گزر نہر , Canalisation : نہر بنانے کا عمل , Flesh : گوشت , Stenosed : سکڑا ہوا
Useful Words Definitions
Bowel: the part of the alimentary canal starts from the stomach.
Enteron: the alimentary canal (especially of an embryo or a coelenterate).
Colicky: suffering from excessive gas in the alimentary canal.
Digestible: capable of being converted into assimilable condition in the alimentary canal.
Breadbasket: an enlarged and muscular saclike organ of the alimentary canal; the principal organ of digestion.
Tail: the posterior part of the body of a vertebrate especially when elongated and extending beyond the trunk or main part of the body.
Jaw: the part of the skull of a vertebrate that frames the mouth and holds the teeth.
Inversion: abnormal condition in which an organ is turned inward or inside out (as when the upper part of the uterus is pulled into the cervical canal after childbirth).
Medulla Spinalis: a major part of the central nervous system which conducts sensory and motor nerve impulses to and from the brain; a long tubelike structure extending from the base of the brain through the vertebral canal to the upper lumbar region.
Caul: the inner membrane of embryos in higher vertebrates (especially when covering the head at birth).
Shark: any of numerous elongate mostly marine carnivorous fishes with heterocercal caudal fins and tough skin covered with small toothlike scales.
Eyeball: the ball-shaped capsule containing the vertebrate eye.
Abdomen: the region of the body of a vertebrate between the thorax and the pelvis.
Peptic Ulcer: an ulcer of the mucous membrane lining of the alimentary tract.
Polydactyl: of or relating to a person (or other vertebrate) having more than the normal number of digits.
Tetrapod: a vertebrate animal having four feet or legs or leglike appendages.
Agnathan: eel-shaped vertebrate without jaws or paired appendages including the cyclostomes and some extinct forms.
Heterostraci: extinct group of armored jawless fishes or fish-like vertebrate; taxonomy is not clear.
Headfish: among the largest bony fish; pelagic fish having an oval compressed body with high dorsal fins and caudal fin reduced to a rudder-like lobe; worldwide in warm waters.
Cerebellum: a major division of the vertebrate brain; situated above the medulla oblongata and beneath the cerebrum in humans.
Fetus: an unborn or unhatched vertebrate in the later stages of development showing the main recognizable features of the mature animal.
Reptile: any cold-blooded vertebrate of the class Reptilia including tortoises, turtles, snakes, lizards, alligators, crocodiles, and extinct forms.
Pelvic Fin: either of a pair of fins attached to the pelvic girdle in fishes that help control the direction of movement; correspond to hind limbs of a land vertebrate.
Mammal: any warm-blooded vertebrate having the skin more or less covered with hair; young are born alive except for the small subclass of monotremes and nourished with milk.
Blood Platelet: tiny bits of protoplasm found in vertebrate blood; essential for blood clotting.
Hip: the structure of the vertebrate skeleton supporting the lower limbs in humans and the hind limbs or corresponding parts in other vertebrates.
Rickettsia: any of a group of very small rod-shaped bacteria that live in biting arthropods (as ticks and mites) and cause disease in vertebrate hosts; they cause typhus and other febrile diseases in human beings.
Ship Canal: a canal large enough for seagoing vessels.
Canalisation: the production of a canal or a conversion to canals.
Flesh: the soft tissue of the body of a vertebrate: mainly muscle tissue and fat.
Stenosed: abnormally constricted body canal or passage.