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Definição e significado de finger

Definição

finger (n.)

1.one of the parts of a glove that provides covering for a finger or thumb

2.any of the terminal members of the hand (sometimes excepting the thumb)"her fingers were long and thin"

3.the length of breadth of a finger used as a linear measure

finger (v. trans.)

1.indicate the fingering for the playing of musical scores for keyboard instruments

2.examine by touch"Feel this soft cloth!" "The customer fingered the sweater"

3.feel or handle with the fingers"finger the binding of the book"

4.search for on the computer"I fingered my boss and found that he is not logged on in the afternoons"

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Merriam Webster

FingerFin"ger (fĭṉ"gẽr), n. [AS. finger; akin to D. vinger, OS. & OHG. fingar, G. finger, Icel. fingr, Sw. & Dan. finger, Goth. figgrs; of unknown origin; perh. akin to E. fang.]
1. One of the five terminating members of the hand; a digit; esp., one of the four extremities of the hand, other than the thumb.

2. Anything that does the work of a finger; as, the pointer of a clock, watch, or other registering machine; especially (Mech.) a small projecting rod, wire, or piece, which is brought into contact with an object to effect, direct, or restrain a motion.

3. The breadth of a finger, or the fourth part of the hand; a measure of nearly an inch; also, the length of finger, a measure in domestic use in the United States, of about four and a half inches or one eighth of a yard.

A piece of steel three fingers thick. Bp. Wilkins.

4. Skill in the use of the fingers, as in playing upon a musical instrument. [R.]

She has a good finger. Busby.

Ear finger, the little finger. -- Finger alphabet. See Dactylology. -- Finger bar, the horizontal bar, carrying slotted spikes, or fingers, through which the vibratory knives of mowing and reaping machines play. -- Finger board (Mus.), the part of a stringed instrument against which the fingers press the strings to vary the tone; the keyboard of a piano, organ, etc.; manual. -- Finger bowl Finger glass, a bowl or glass to hold water for rinsing the fingers at table. -- Finger flower (Bot.), the foxglove. -- Finger grass (Bot.), a kind of grass (Panicum sanguinale) with slender radiating spikes; common crab grass. See Crab grass, under Crab. -- Finger nut, a fly nut or thumb nut. -- Finger plate, a strip of metal, glass, etc., to protect a painted or polished door from finger marks. -- Finger post, a guide post bearing an index finger. -- Finger reading, reading printed in relief so as to be sensible to the touch; -- so made for the blind. -- Finger shell (Zoöl.), a marine shell (Pholas dactylus) resembling a finger in form. -- Finger sponge (Zoöl.), a sponge having finger-shaped lobes, or branches. -- Finger stall, a cover or shield for a finger. -- Finger steel, a steel instrument for whetting a currier's knife.

To burn one's fingers. See under Burn. -- To have a finger in, to be concerned in. [Colloq.] -- To have at one's fingers' ends, to be thoroughly familiar with. [Colloq.]

FingerFin"ger (?), v. t. [imp. & p. p. Fingered (?); p. pr. & vb. n. Fingering.]
1. To touch with the fingers; to handle; to meddle with.

Let the papers lie;
You would be fingering them to anger me.
Shak.

2. To touch lightly; to toy with.

3. (Mus.) (a) To perform on an instrument of music. (b) To mark the notes of (a piece of music) so as to guide the fingers in playing.

4. To take thievishly; to pilfer; to purloin. Shak.

5. To execute, as any delicate work.

FingerFin"ger, v. i. (Mus.) To use the fingers in playing on an instrument. Busby.

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Definiciones (más)

definição - Wikipedia

Sinónimos

Ver também

finger (n.)

cot, digital, fingerstall

Locuções

Accessory finger(s) • Acquired absence of finger(s) [including thumb], unilateral • Acquired absence of finger(s), bilateral • Cellulitis of finger and toe • Contusion of finger(s) NOS • Contusion of finger(s) with damage to nail • Contusion of finger(s) without damage to nail • Deformity of finger(s) • Dislocation of finger • Finger Agnosia • Finger Bones • Finger Injuries • Finger Joint • Finger Lakes • Finger Phalanges • Finger Replacement Arthroplasty • Finger Sucking • Finger-Agnosia-Left-Right-Confusion-Acalculia-Agraphia • Finger-joint replacement • Fracture of other finger • Fracture of other finger | closed • Fracture of other finger | open • Indian Finger Millet • Injuries, Finger • Millet, Finger • Millet, Indian Finger • Open wound of finger(s) NOS • Open wound of finger(s) with damage to nail • Open wound of finger(s) without damage to nail • PHD Finger Protein 9 • RING Finger Domains • RING Finger Motifs • Snapping Finger • Sprain and strain of finger(s) • Trigger Finger Disorder • Trigger finger • Trigger finger | ankle and foot • Trigger finger | forearm • Trigger finger | hand • Trigger finger | lower leg • Trigger finger | multiple sites • Trigger finger | other • Trigger finger | pelvic region and thigh • Trigger finger | shoulder region • Trigger finger | site unspecified • Trigger finger | upper arm • Zinc Finger Motifs • Zinc Finger Protein 36 • Zinc Finger Protein 51 • Zinc Finger Protein HRX • finger (nail) • finger alphabet • finger biscuit • finger bowl • finger cymbals • finger food • finger grass • finger hole • finger millet • finger paint • finger painting • finger phenomon • finger plate • finger scan • finger scanning • finger spelling • finger wave • finger's breadth • finger-flower • finger-grass • finger-paint • finger-painting • finger-plate • finger-pointing • finger-roll • finger-root • finger-spell • finger-to-nose test • fish finger • five-finger • hairy finger grass • hairy finger-grass • have a finger in the pie / in every pie • index finger • lady finger • lady's-finger • little finger • medius middle finger • middle finger • put one's finger on • ring finger • sponge finger • the finger • third finger • trigger finger

Baseball finger • Bill Finger • Bill Finger Award • Bill finger • Board finger • Charles Finger • Charles J. Finger • Chicken finger • Cold finger • Culture Finger • Dead finger • Double finger • Drop finger • Eleventh finger • Ernst Finger • FYVE finger-containing phosphoinositide kinase • Feather Finger • Finger (Bottom episode) • Finger (aircraft) • Finger (disambiguation) • Finger (gesture) • Finger (length) • Finger (volume) • Finger 11 • Finger 5 • Finger Eleven • Finger Eleven (album) • Finger Eleven discography • Finger Five • Finger Lakes • Finger Lakes AVA • Finger Lakes Christian School • Finger Lakes Community College • Finger Lakes Gaming and Race Track • Finger Lakes GrassRoots Festival of Music and Dance • Finger Lakes Heartbreakers • Finger Lakes National Forest • Finger Lakes Railway • Finger Lakes School of Massage • Finger Lakes State Park • Finger Lakes Trail • Finger Lakes Underwater Preserve Association • Finger Lickin' Good (song) • Finger Lickin' Records • Finger Mountain • Finger Of Doom • Finger Paintings • Finger Plan • Finger Prints • Finger Prints (book) • Finger Style Guitar • Finger Tapping (Piano) • Finger Tips • Finger Touching • Finger Twiddling • Finger Wharf • Finger agnosia • Finger armor ring • Finger binary • Finger bowl • Finger cot • Finger counting • Finger cuffs • Finger flexor reflex • Finger fluting • Finger food • Finger fucking • Finger guillotine • Finger gun • Finger joint • Finger knitting • Finger lickin' good • Finger locking • Finger millet • Finger moustache tattoo • Finger of Fate (Fisher Towers) • Finger of God • Finger of the Galilee • Finger on the Trigger • Finger on the Trigger (film) • Finger paint • Finger painting • Finger pillory • Finger placements • Finger plane • Finger potato • Finger prints • Finger protocol • Finger railway station • Finger roll • Finger sleeve • Finger snapping • Finger spin • Finger steaks • Finger stool • Finger substitution • Finger tab • Finger tip unit • Finger trap • Finger tree • Finger vibrato • Finger wave • Finger, Tennessee • Finger-Tatuk Provincial Park • Finger-counting • Finger-joint • Finger-paint • Finger-painting • Finger-print • First Time (Finger Eleven song) • Fish finger • Five Finger Death Punch • Five Finger Exercise • Five Finger Islands Light • Five Finger Mountain • Five Finger Rapids • Five finger exercise • Good Times (Finger Eleven song) • Gottfried Finger • Green finger • Hey Man, Smell My Finger • Hippocratic finger • Homer Ellis Finger • Homer Ellis Finger, Jr. • Homer Finger • Human finger • I Vant to Bite Your Finger • IAI Finger • Index finger • Ingrid Finger • Jammed finger • Jeff Finger • Joseph Finger • Lady finger • Little finger • Love Is in Control (Finger on the Trigger) • MUT (zinc finger protein) • Mallet finger • Matthias Finger • Middle Finger U • Middle finger • Mullet finger • Never Enough (Five Finger Death Punch song) • Only the Ring Finger Knows • PHD finger • Paul Finger • Pelvic finger • Pinky finger • Pointing the Finger • Pull my finger • RING finger domain • Radial artery of index finger • Reginald Finger • Ring finger • Six Finger Satellite • Something You Can Do with Your Finger • Soul Finger • Split-finger • Split-finger fastball • Super Finger • Taj Finger • The 4 Finger Club • The 4th finger • The Bird Is the Most Popular Finger • The Bleeding (Five Finger Death Punch song) • The Day Finger Pickers Took Over the World • The Eye and the Finger • The Fickle Finger of Fate • The Finger (Alberta) • The Finger (CSI) • The Finger (band) • The Finger of Suspicion (Points at You) • The Magic Finger • The Monkey's Finger • The Moving Finger (disambiguation) • The Moving Finger (short story) • The Sixth Finger • Third Finger, Left Hand • Three Finger Lake • Three-finger salute • Three-finger salute (Serbian) • Tip (Finger Eleven song) • Trigger finger • TurnPro Magnetic Finger • Two-finger salute • Vibration white finger • Wolfgang Finger • Wrapped Around Your Finger • Zinc finger • Zinc finger FYVE domain-containing protein 9 • Zinc finger and BTB domain-containing protein 16 • Zinc finger chimera • Zinc finger inhibitor • Zinc finger nuclease • Zinc finger protein • Zinc finger protein 165 • Zinc finger protein 804A • Zinc finger protein transcription factor • Zinc-finger protein

Dicionario analógico

finger (n.)

gant (fr)[DomaineDescription]

covering[Hyper.]

glove[Desc]




finger (n.)

finger[Similaire]




finger (v. tr.)



Wikipedia

Finger

                   
  Fingers of the human left hand.

A finger is a limb of the human body and a type of digit, an organ of manipulation and sensation found in the hands of humans and other primates.[1][2] Normally humans have five digits, termed phalanges,[2] on each hand (exceptions are polydactyly, oligodactyly and digit loss). The first digit is the thumb, followed by index finger, middle finger, ring finger, and little finger or pinky. Some other languages use the same generic term for all five digits of a hand.

English dictionaries describe finger as meaning either one of the five digits including the thumb, or one of the four excluding the thumb (in which case they are numbered from 1 to 4 starting with the index finger closest to the thumb).[1][2][3] Linguistically, it appears that the original sense was to include the thumb as a finger: the word is derived from *‍penkwe-ros[citation needed] (also rendered as *penqrós[citation needed]) which was, in the inferred Proto-Indo-European language, a suffixed form of *penkwe (or *penqe), "five", which has[citation needed] given rise to many Indo-European-family words (tens of them defined in English dictionaries) that involve or flow from concepts of fiveness.

Chimpanzees have lower limbs that are specialized for manipulation, and (arguably) have fingers on their lower limbs as well. The term 'finger' is not applied to the digits of most other animals, such as canines, felines, or ungulates, none of which can engage in fine manipulation with their forelimbs as a primate can.

Contents

  Function

Each finger may flex and extend, abduct and adduct, and so also circumduct. Flexion is by far the strongest movement. In humans, there are two large muscles that produce flexion of each finger, and additional muscles that augment the movement. Each finger may move independently of the others, though the muscle bulks that move each finger may be partly blended, and the tendons may be attached to each other by a net of fibrous tissue, preventing completely free movement. This is particularly noticeable when trying to extend the third digit (middle finger) with the others flexed.

Fingers are usually moved under conscious control. In humans, they are used for grasping, typing, grooming, writing, caressing, and many other activities. They are also used in signaling, as when wearing a wedding ring, finger counting or when communicating in sign language.

Aside from the genitals, the fingertips possess the highest concentration of touch receptors and thermoreceptors among all areas of the human skin, making them extremely sensitive to temperature, pressure, vibration, texture, and moisture. Thus fingers are commonly used as sensory probes to ascertain properties of objects encountered in the world, and so they are prone to injury.

Fingers do not contain muscles other than arrector pili muscles. The muscles that move the finger joints are in the palm and forearm. The long tendons that deliver motion from the forearm muscles may be observed to move under the skin at the wrist and on the back of the hand.

  Fingers

Each of the fingers has unique cultural and functional significance. From the thumb on the radial side to the ulnar side of the hand, the fingers are in this order:

Palce.jpg
  1. Thumb, (med./lat.: Pollex)
  2. Index finger, (digitus secundus manus) also called 'pointer finger', or 'forefinger'
  3. Middle finger, (digitus medius and more commonly digitus tertius) often the longest
  4. Ring finger, (digitus annularis) also known as fourth finger
  5. Little finger, (digitus mínimus mánus) also known as 'pinky'

  Anatomy

The 5 digits are attached to the forearm by a joint called the wrist (carpus).[4][5]

The thumb (connected to the trapezium) is located on one of the sides, parallel to the arm.

  Illustration depicting the bones of the human hand

The palm has five bones known as metacarpal bones, one to each of the 5 digits. Human hands contain fourteen digital bones, also called phalanges, or phalanx bones: two in the thumb (the thumb has no middle phalanx) and three in each of the four fingers. These are the distal phalanx, carrying the nail, the middle phalanx, and the proximal phalanx.

Sesamoid bones are small ossified nodes embedded in the tendons to provide extra leverage and reduce pressure on the underlying tissue. Many exist around the palm at the bases of the digits; the exact number varies between different people.

The articulations are: interphalangeal articulations between phalangeal bones, and metacarpophalangeal joints connecting the phalanges to the metacarpal bones.

The pulp of a finger is the fleshy mass on the palmar aspect of the extremity of the finger.[6]

  Muscles

  Muscles and other structures of wrist and palm

Muscles of the fingers can be subdivided into two groups: the extrinsic and intrinsic muscle groups. The extrinsic muscle groups are the long flexors and extensors. They are called extrinsic because the muscle belly is located on the forearm.

The intrinsic muscle groups are the thenar and hypothenar muscles (thenar referring to the thumb, hypothenar to the small finger), the interossei muscles (between the metacarpal bones, four dorsally and three volarly) and the lumbrical muscles. These muscles arise from the deep flexor (and are special because they have no bony origin) and insert on the dorsal extensor hood mechanism. The intrinsic muscles of hand can be remembered using the mnemonic, "A OF A OF A" for, Abductor pollicis brevis, Opponens pollicis, Flexor pollicis brevis, Adductor pollicis (thenar muscles) and Opponens digiti minimi, Flexor digiti minimi brevis, Abductor digiti minimi (hypothenar muscles).[7]

The fingers have two long flexors, located on the underside of the forearm. They insert by tendons to the phalanges of the fingers. The deep flexor attaches to the distal phalanx, and the superficial flexor attaches to the middle phalanx. The flexors allow for the actual bending of the fingers. The thumb has one long flexor and a short flexor in the thenar muscle group. The human thumb also has other muscles in the thenar group (opponens and abductor brevis muscle), moving the thumb in opposition, making grasping possible.

The extensors are located on the back of the forearm and are connected in a more complex way than the flexors to the dorsum of the fingers. The tendons unite with the interosseous and lumbrical muscles to form the extensorhood mechanism. The primary function of the extensors is to straighten out the digits. The thumb has two extensors in the forearm; the tendons of these form the anatomical snuff box. Also, the index finger and the little finger have an extra extensor, used for instance for pointing. The extensors are situated within 6 separate compartments. The 1st compartment contains abductor pollicis longus and extensor pollicis brevis. The 2nd compartment contains extensors carpi radialis longus and brevis. The 3rd compartment contains extensor pollicis longus. The extensor digitorum indicis and extensor digititorum communis are within the 4th compartment. Extensor digiti minimi is in the fifth, and extensor carpi ulnaris is in the 6th.

  Anomalies and diseases

  Radiograph of Type 1 Syndactyly

A rare anatomical variation affects 1 in 500 humans,[8] in which the individual has more than the usual number of digits; this is known as polydactyly. A human may also be born without one or more fingers or underdevelopment of some fingers such as symbrachydactyly. Extra fingers can be functional. One individual with seven fingers not only used them but claimed that they “gave him some advantages in playing the piano.”[9]

Phalanges are commonly fractured. A damaged tendon can cause significant loss of function in fine motor control, such as with a mallet finger.

Finger locking is the act of locking the middle joint of a finger in place, and bending the very last joint independently from the others. Many people have the ability to do this in only one hand or even in both, depending on how the muscles are formed in the hand. Finger locking may cause pain.[citation needed]

The fingers are commonly affected by diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis and gout. Diabetics often use the fingers to obtain blood samples for regular blood sugar testing. Raynaud's phenomenon is a neurovascular disorder that affects the fingers.

Research has linked the ratio of lengths between the index and ring fingers to higher levels of testosterone, and to various physical and behavioral traits such as penis length[10] and risk for development of alcohol dependence.[11]

  Brain representation

Each finger has an orderly somatotopic representation on the cerebral cortex in the somatosensory cortex area 3b,[12] part of area 1[13] and a distributed, overlapping representations in the supplementary motor area and primary motor area.[14]

The somatosensory cortex representation of the hand is a dynamic reflection of the fingers on the external hand: in syndactyly people have a clubhand of webbed, shortened fingers. However, not only are the fingers of their hands fused, but the cortical maps of their individual fingers also form a club hand. The fingers can be surgically divided to make a more useful hand. Surgeons did this at the Institute of Reconstructive Plastic Surgery in New York to a 32-year-old man with the initials O. G.. They touched O. G.’s fingers before and after surgery while using MRI brain scans. Before the surgery, the fingers mapped onto his brain were fused close together; afterward, the maps of his individual fingers did indeed separate and take the layout corresponding to a normal hand.[15]

  See also

  Notes

  1. ^ a b Chambers 1998 page 603
  2. ^ a b c Oxford Illustrated pages 311,380
  3. ^ Oxford Advanced page 326
  4. ^ "Nature Bulletin No. 611". Division of Educational Programs, Argonne National Laboratory. 1960-10-01. http://www.newton.dep.anl.gov/natbltn/600-699/nb611.htm. Retrieved 2007-12-24. 
  5. ^ "hand". Oxford English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. 3rd ed. 2001.
  6. ^ medilexicon.com > Medical Dictionary - 'Pulp Of Finger' Citing: Stedman's Medical Dictionary. 2006
  7. ^ "Medical mnemonics". LifeHugger. http://mc.lifehugger.com/moc/386/intrinsic-muscles-hand. Retrieved 2009-12-19. 
  8. ^ Greene, Alan (May 19, 1997). "Polydactylism". drgreene.com. http://www.drgreene.com/21_182.html. Retrieved 2008-06-26. 
  9. ^ Dwight T. (1892). Fusion of hands. Memoirs of the Boston Society of Natural History, 4, 473-486.
  10. ^ Researchers Find Association Between Penile Length and Ratio of Length of Men's Fingers
  11. ^ Kornhuber J, Erhard G, Lenz B, Kraus T, Sperling W, Bayerlein K, Biermann T, Stoessel C (2011): Low digit ratio 2D:4D in alcohol dependent patients. PLoS ONE, Vol. 6, Nr. 4, e19332.
  12. ^ van Westen D, Fransson P, Olsrud J, Rosén B, Lundborg G, Larsson EM. (2004). Fingersomatotopy in area 3b: an fMRI-study. BMC Neurosci. 5:28. doi:10.1186/1471-2202-5-28 PMID 15320953
  13. ^ Nelson AJ, Chen R. (2008). Digit somatotopy within cortical areas of the postcentral gyrus in humans. Cereb Cortex. 18(10):2341-51. doi:10.1093/cercor/bhm257 PMID 18245039
  14. ^ Kleinschmidt A, Nitschke MF, Frahm J. (1997). Somatotopy in the human motor cortex hand area. A high-resolution functional MRI study. Eur J Neurosci. 9(10):2178-86. PMID 9421177
  15. ^ Mogilner A, Grossman JA, Ribary U, Joliot M, Volkmann J, Rapaport D, Beasley RW, Llinás RR. (1993). Somatosensory cortical plasticity in adult humans revealed by magnetoencephalography. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 90(8):3593-7. doi:10.1073/pnas.90.8.3593 PMID 8386377

  References

  • The Chambers Dictionary. Edinburgh: Chambers Harrap Publishers Ltd. 2000 [1998]. ISBN [[Special:BookSources/0-550-14005-X|0-550-14005-X]]. 
  • The Oxford Illustrated Dictionary. Great Britain: Oxford University Press. 1976 [1975]. 
  • Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary of Current English. London: Oxford University Press. 1974 [1974]. ISBN 0-19-431102-3. 

  External links

   
               

 

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