pith
(botany) The soft, spongy substance inside plant parts; specifically, the parenchyma in the center of the roots and stems of many plants and trees.
In young trees there is a conspicuous central portion of pith which remains after the tree matures, as long as the heartwood is sound. The lines radiating from the centre to the circumference are called medullary or pith rays and form the “silver grain” of the wood.
(botany) The albedo (whitish inner portion of the rind) of a citrus fruit.
(by extension) The soft tissue inside a human or animal body or one of their organs; specifically, the spongy interior substance of a horn or the shaft of a feather.
(by extension) Chiefly of animals: the soft tissue inside a spinal cord; the spinal marrow; also, the spinal cord itself.
(by extension, obsolete) The thin layer of soft, spongy, or cancellate tissue between the bone plates which constitute the skull.
(by extension, obsolete, rare) The soft tissue of the brain.
(by extension, Ireland, Southern England, West Country) The soft inner portion of a loaf of bread.
(figurative) The central or innermost part of something; the core, the heart.
(figurative) The essential or vital part of something; the essence.
(figurative) Physical power or strength; force, might.
(figurative) A quality of courage and endurance; backbone, mettle, spine.
(figurative) The energy, force, or power of speech or writing; specifically, such force or power due to conciseness; punch, punchiness.
(figurative) Gravity, importance, substance, weight.
To render insensate or kill (an animal, especially cattle or a laboratory animal) by cutting, piercing, or otherwise destroying the spinal cord.
To extract the pith from (something or (figurative) someone).
(mathematics) The ordinal form of the number pi (π; approximately 3.14159…).
(mathematics) One divided by pi, that is, 1 / π (approximately 0.31831…).
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