The Latin quotation Gnarus ut accepto veneretur carmine divos omentum in flamma pingue liquefaciens means "So that the expert may worship the gods with a pleasing song, melting the fatty entrails in the flame."
This is a quotation from number 90 of the Carmina ("Songs") of the Roman poet Gaius Valerius Catullus (c. 84 BC - 54 BC). The only source that includes the word gnarus is a 16th-century essay entitled A Discourse Upon Coins by Bernardo Davanzati; other sources give in its place gnatus, "born" (which can mean "son"), or gratus, "thankful [man]". The most recent scholarly sources seem to agree on gratus.
Greater & lesser omentum, Falciform ligament, and MesenteryVisceral Peritoneum, Parietal Peritoneum, and MesenteryThe top, the middle, and the left side.mesentery and greater omentum
The greater omentum
The Greater Omentum
The Omentum supports the stomach in position within the abdominopelvic cavity.
lesser omentum, greater omentum, and mesentery
The attachments of the greater omentum are: # The Dorsal Abdominal Wall # The Greater Curvature of the Stomach
greater omentum
The greater omentum is located in the stomach. It is like an apron that extends from the greater curvature of the stomach to the transverse colon. Its purpose is for fat deposition, immune contribution, and infection and wound isolation. The lesser omentum, on the other hand, extends from the liver to the lesser curvature of the stomach. There is no known function of the lesser omentum.
The greater omentum is a large fold of the peritoneum. It hangs down from the stomach reaching down to the transverse colon. The greater omentum is filled with fat, preventing heat loss from the organs. It also provides padding to protect the organs.
Lesser Omentum
I don't know you idiots!
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