Cupping

ahd-5
  • noun. A treatment in which evacuated glass cups are applied to intact or scarified skin in order to draw blood toward or through the surface. It was used for disorders associated with an excess of blood, one of the four humors of medieval physiology.
  • The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia
  • noun. The taking of a concave form, as tobacco leaves do in drying, when placed face to back. Cupping is prevented by stringing the leaves face to face and back to back.
  • noun. In surgery, the application of the cupping-glass.
  • noun. A concavity in the end of a cylindrical casting, produced by the shrinkage of the metal.
  • noun. A shallow countersink.
  • the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English
  • noun. The operation of drawing blood to or from the surface of the person by forming a partial vacuum over the spot. Also, sometimes, a similar operation for drawing pus from an abscess.
  • noun. a glass cup in which a partial vacuum is produced by heat, in the process of cupping.
  • noun. the application of a cupping instrument without scarification, to draw blood to the surface, produce counter irritation, etc.
  • noun. the operation of drawing blood by the application of a cupping instrument after scarification.
  • Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
  • noun. The operation of drawing blood to or from the surface of the person by forming a partial vacuum over the spot.
  • noun. A similar operation for drawing pus from an abscess.
  • noun. Fire cupping, a traditional therapeutic treatment called in which heated glass cups are applied to the skin, supposedly to draw blood towards the surface.
  • noun. The taking of a small amount of a beverage such as tea or coffee into the mouth in order to taste it; a session where this is done.
  • verb. Present participle of cup.
  • WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
  • noun. a treatment in which evacuated cups are applied to the skin to draw blood through the surface
  • Word Usage
    "Moreover, one should not be cupped in very hot weather nor in very cold weather; and the best season for cupping is springtide."