Lung (?), n. [OE. lunge, AS. lunge, pl. lungen; akin to D. long, G. lunge, Icel. & Sw. lunga, Dan. lunge, all prob. from the root of E. light. See Light not heavy.] Anat.

An organ for aerial respiration; -- commonly in the plural.

My lungs began to crow like chanticleer. Shak.

<-- Insert: Illustration of lungs with description. -->

⇒ In all air-breathing vertebrates the lungs are developed from the ventral wall of the esophagus as a pouch which divides into two sacs. In amphibians and many reptiles the lungs retain very nearly this primitive saclike character, but in the higher forms the connection with the esophagus becomes elongated into the windpipe and the inner walls of the sacs become more and more divided, until, in the mammals, the air spaces become minutely divided into tubes ending in small air cells, in the walls of which the blood circulates in a fine network of capillaries. In mammals the lungs are more or less divided into lobes, and each lung occupies a separate cavity in the thorax. See Respiration.

Lung fever Med., pneumonia. -- Lung flower Bot., a species of gentian (G. Pneumonanthe). -- Lung lichen Bot., tree lungwort. See under Lungwort. Lung sac Zool., one of the breathing organs of spiders and snails.

 

© Webster 1913.