Womb  

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-[[Plato]] observes, " that the womb is a wild beast that obeys no law ; but which, when its desires are unsated, wanders about within the body, and excites all sorts of irregular motions."+[[Plato]] observes in ''[[Timaeus (dialogue)|Timaeus]]'', " that the womb is a wild beast that obeys no law ; but which, when its desires are unsated, wanders about within the body, and excites all sorts of irregular motions."
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Plato observes in Timaeus, " that the womb is a wild beast that obeys no law ; but which, when its desires are unsated, wanders about within the body, and excites all sorts of irregular motions."

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A womb refers to a uterus.

From Middle English wombe, wambe, from Old English womb, wamb (“belly, stomach; bowels; heart; womb; hollow”), from Proto-Germanic *wambō (“belly, stomach, abdomen”), from Proto-Indo-European *wamp- (“membrane (of bowels), intestines, womb”). Cognate with Scots wam, wame (“womb”), Dutch wam (“dewlap of beef; belly of a fish”), German Wamme, Wampe (“paunch, belly”), Danish vom (“belly, paunch, rumen”), Swedish våmb (“belly, stomach, rumen”), Norwegian vomb (“belly”), Icelandic vömb (“belly, abdomen, stomach”), Old Welsh gumbelauc (“womb”), Breton gwamm (“woman, wife”), Sanskrit वपा (vapā́, “the skin or membrane lining the intestines or parts of the viscera, the caul or omentum”).

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Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Womb" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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