Rhinoplasty was what it was called when I had some surgery inside my nose to remove some of the cartilage in my septum.
It is total nonsense - "out of many a sheep fold, a horse paddock, a hedge, wall or fence". The word septum or saeptum has all those meanings and it also refers to the nasal septum, the fleshy wall between the human nostrils.
Saepire is the Latin root word of 'septum'. It's an infinitive that means 'to hedge in'. The more common form of 'septum' is in fact 'saeptum'. Either way, the word is a past participle that's used as a neuter gender noun. And either way, the word means 'barrier, enclosure, wall'.
That is 'nasal'
zanjkla
an anagram
He had a deviated septum.His septum was broken in the fight.
When someone says "nasal" it refers to the nose or an area near the nose (e.g., nasal vs. temporal visual field).
Septum inter duobus ducibus and Resistor aquae may be the respective Latin equivalents of 'insulation' and 'waterproofing'. The first phrase literally means 'barrier between two conductors' in Latin. In the word by word translation, the noun 'septum' means barrier'. The preposition 'inter' means 'between'. The number 'duobus' means 'two'. The noun 'ducibus' means 'conductors'. The second phrase literally means 'resister of water'. In the word by word translation, the noun 'resistor' means 'resister'. The noun 'aquae' means 'of water'.
Septum is another word for an anatomic wall separating two chambers. For instance, the interventricular septum separates the right and left ventricles of the hearts.
The English word "septum", which in Latin refers to an enclosure or hedge, refers to a wall separating two cavities.
Anything that has to do with the concept of seven. September - use to be the seventh month in the old Julian calender. Septane an organic alkane molecule with seven carbon atoms.
seven