introitus

Etymology
From.

Pronunciation

 * singular
 * plural
 * plural

Noun

 * 1)  The entrance to a hollow organ or canal; often specifically the entrance to the vagina.
 * 2) * 1993: Daniel Carleton Gajdusek, Melanesian journal: expedition to New Hebrides, Solomon Islands, Manus, New Britain, and New Guinea, 23 January 1965 to 7 April 1965, page 90 (Study of Child Growth and Development and Disease Patterns in Primitive Cultures, Laboratory of Central Nervous System Studies, National Institute of Neurological Disease and Stroke, National Institutes of Health)
 * There is nothing feminine about these male pseudohermaphrodites except their introitus, and they seem to be normally male otherwise.
 * 1)  A piece of music played before a mass; a musical introduction of any sort.
 * There is nothing feminine about these male pseudohermaphrodites except their introitus, and they seem to be normally male otherwise.
 * 1)  A piece of music played before a mass; a musical introduction of any sort.

Quotations

 * 1955: Geoffrey Chaucer, Richard Middlewood Wilson, Simon Bredon, Derek John de Solla Price, and Peterhouse (University of Cambridge) Library, The Equatorie of the Planetis, page 161 (Cambridge University Press)
 * It seems that many such technical words (grada, minuta, introitus) were left in the uninflected state when contracted in any customary form such as we have […]

Derived terms

 * introitus vaginae

Etymology
From.

Noun

 * 1) introit, introitus

Etymology
From, from +.

Pronunciation

 * nominative and vocative singular (introitus)
 * genitive singular and nominative, accusative, and vocative plural (introitūs)
 * genitive singular and nominative, accusative, and vocative plural (introitūs)

Noun

 * 1) A going in or into, entering; entrance.
 * 2) A place of entrance; passage; mouth of a river.
 * 3)  An entering or entrance into an office or a society; entrance fee.
 * 4)  A beginning, introduction, prelude.
 * 5)  An introit.

Descendants

 * Galician
 * Galician
 * Galician
 * Galician