Morpheme
Lese
Type
free base
Denotation
hurt, injured, wounded, damaged
Etymology
Old French lesion; Latin laesiō, from laesus, from laedere
Evidence
contralesional, cryolesion, cryolesion, epilesional, extralesional, hemilesion, hemilesion, immunolesion, immunolesion, interlesion, interlesion, interlesional, intralesional, ipsilesional, ipsilesional, lesion, lesional, lesional, lesionectomy, lesionectomy, lesioned, lesioning, lesionless, lesionless, lesionlike, lesionlike, lesions, microlesion, microlesion, microlesional, microlesioned, multilesion, multilesion, nonlesion, nonlesion, nonlesioned, perilesion, perilesion, photolesion, photolesion, postlesion, postlesion, prelesion, prelesion, pseudolesion, pseudolesion, radiolesion, radiolesion, sublesional, translesion, translesion, unlesioned
Notes
found in the phrase “lese majesty”