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suture

Transitive Verb[C/U] Both
pl: suturespast: suturedpp: sutureding: suturingcomp: nullsup: null

This term carries a clinical, sterile precision that separates it from the domestic act of sewing. While sewing is a craft or hobby, suturing is a medical intervention designed to facilitate healing and prevent infection. It evokes the image of a sterile operating room, surgical steel, and the careful closing of a biological gap. In an anatomical sense, the word describes a permanent, interlocking bond between bone plates. This creates a contrast between the temporary, removable threads used in surgery and the lifelong, immovable seams of the human skeleton.

Countable when referring to individual stitches or the threads themselves. Uncountable when referring to the general process of stitching a wound.

Meanings

Noun
[something]

A stitch or row of stitches holding together the edges of a wound or surgical incision.

"The surgeon removed the sutures after ten days."

Noun
[something]

A line of junction between two cranial bones.

"The sagittal suture runs along the top of the skull."

Transitive Verb
[someone][something]

To sew together the edges of a wound or tissue.

"The nurse will suture the laceration."

Last Updated: May 27, 2026Report an Error