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Origin and history of neurosurgeon

neurosurgeon(n.)

also neuro-surgeon, "one who does surgery on the nervous system," especially the brain and spinal cord, 1918, from neuro- + surgeon. Related: Neurosurgery; neurosurgical.

Entries linking to neurosurgeon

c. 1300, surgien, sorgien (the common form), a contraction of cirurgien (learned form), "medical practitioner chiefly concerned with wounds, fractures, etc.;" etymologically, "person who heals by manual operation on the patient," from Anglo-French surgien (13c.), from Old French surgiien, cirirgiien (13c.), from cirurgie "surgery." This is from Latin chirurgia "surgery," from Greek kheirourgia, from kheirourgos "working or done by hand," from kheir "hand" (from PIE root *ghes- "the hand") + ergon "work" (from PIE root *werg- "to do").

Surgener (early 15c.) also was used. Surgeon-general, an officer of high rank in the army or navy service, is by 1889. The surgeon-fish (1871) is so called for the lancet-shaped spine on each side of the tail.

before vowels neur-, word-forming element meaning "pertaining to a nerve or nerves or the nervous system," from Greek neura "nerve" (Galen), originally "sinew, bowstring," also neuron "sinew, string (of a bow or musical instrument); cord; penis;" in plural "strength, vigor," from PIE *(s)neuro- "tendon, sinew" (see nerve (n.)). In Greek, puppets were neurospastos, literally "drawn by strings."

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    Trends of neurosurgeon

    adapted from books.google.com/ngrams/ with a 7-year moving average; ngrams are probably unreliable.

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