释义 |
ap·o·plexy \ˈapəˌpleksē, -si\ noun (-es) Etymology: Middle English apoplexie, from Middle French & Late Latin; Middle French apoplexie, from Late Latin apoplexia, apoplexis, from Greek apoplēxia, apoplēxis, from apoplēssein to cripple by a stroke, from apo- + plēssein to strike — more at plaint 1. a. : a sudden loss of consciousness followed by paralysis caused by hemorrhage into the brain from rupture of an artery or by sudden anemia of a part of the brain from obstruction of its artery either by a blood clot or by the lodgment of an embolus — called also stroke; compare cerebral hemorrhage, cerebral thrombosis b. : gross hemorrhage into a cavity or into the substance of an organ < abdominal apoplexy > < adrenal apoplexy > 2. [so called from the rapid drying of the vine] botany : black measles |