after-burden
Appearance
English
[edit]Noun
[edit]after-burden (plural after-burdens)
- Alternative form of afterburthen
- 1937, Alan Frank Guttmacher -, Into this Universe: The Story of Human Birth, page 15:
- The child neither cried nor seemed to breathe, but he could be given no succour until the womb was freed of its afterburden; and all efforts were centred upon this.
- 1860, The Works of Aristotle the Famous Philosopher, →ISBN:
- But if the after-burden should come first, it must not be put up again by any means; for the infant having no further occasion for it, it would be but an obstacle if it were put up; in this case, it must be cut off, having tied the navel string, and afterwards draw forth the child with all speed that may be, lest it be suffocated.