| Zeke Pleshette. Constantine Bach. The Culebra brothers. | เซค พลีเชท คอนสแตนไทน บากช์ พี่น้อง คูเลบรา MacGruber (2010) |
| culebra | (n) a small island off the coast of Puerto Rico with miles of beautiful beaches |
| cerebral | (adj) involving intelligence rather than emotions or instinct, Syn. intellectual, Ant. emotional, Example: a cerebral approach to the problem; cerebral drama |
| cerebral | (adj) of or relating to the cerebrum or brain, Example: cerebral hemisphere; cerebral activity |
| cerebral aneurysm | (n) an aneurysm of the carotid artery |
| cerebral aqueduct | (n) a canal connecting the third and fourth ventricles, Syn. Sylvian aqueduct, aqueductus cerebri |
| cerebral artery | (n) any of the arteries supplying blood to the cerebral cortex, Syn. arteria cerebri |
| cerebral cortex | (n) the layer of unmyelinated neurons (the grey matter) forming the cortex of the cerebrum, Syn. pallium, cortex, cerebral mantle |
| cerebral edema | (n) swelling of the brain due to the uptake of water in the neuropile and white matter, Syn. brain edema |
| cerebral hemorrhage | (n) bleeding from a ruptured blood vessel in the brain |
| cerebrally | (adv) in an intellectual manner, Example: cerebrally active |
| cerebrally | (adv) in the brain, Example: bleeding cerebrally |
| cerebra | I had a cerebral contusion. |
| Cerebral | n. [ A false translation of the Skr. mūrdhanya, lit., head-sounds. ] One of a class of lingual consonants in the East Indian languages. See Lingual, n. [ 1913 Webster ] ☞ Prof. W. D. Whitney calls these letters linguals, and this is their usual designation in the United States. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Cerebral | a. [ L. cerebrum brain; akin to Gr.
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| Cerebralism | n. (Philos.) The doctrine or theory that psychical phenomena are functions or products of the brain only. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Cerebralist | n. One who accepts cerebralism. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Cerebrate | v. i. (Physiol.) To exhibit mental activity; to have the brain in action. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Cerebration | n. Action of the brain, whether conscious or unconscious. [ 1913 Webster ] |