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Psoas
Muscles of the lower back (the loin). There are two psoas muscles on each side of the back. The larger of the two is called the psoas major and the smaller the psoas minor. The psoas major originates at the spine around the bottom of the rib cage and runs down to the thigh bone (the femur). The psoas major acts to flex the hip. The psoas minor also originates at the spine around the bottom of the rib cage but it runs down to the bony pelvis. It acts to flex the lower (lumbar) spine. The "p" in "psoas" is silent and the emphasis is on the first syllable: so-as. The word "psoas" is Greek for the loins, the muscles of the lower back.
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See p. major (muscle), p. minor (muscle). [G. psoa, the muscles of the loins]

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pso·as 'sō-əs n, pl pso·ai 'sō-.ī or pso·ae -.ē either of two internal muscles of the loin:
a) PSOAS MAJOR
b) PSOAS MINOR

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(psoas major)
n.
a muscle in the groin that acts jointly with the iliacus muscle to flex the hip joint. A smaller muscle, psoas minor, has the same action but is often absent.

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pso·as (soґas) [Gr. genitive of psoa muscles of lower back] see musculus psoas major and musculus psoas minor, under musculus.

Medical dictionary. 2011.