The AI-powered English dictionary
plural biceps or bicepses
(anatomy) Any muscle having two heads. quotations examples
The leg is bent by the action of the flexor muscles situated on the back of the thigh, the chief of these being called the biceps of the leg.
1901, Michael Foster, Lewis E. Shore, Physiology for Beginners, page 73
Specifically, the biceps brachii, the flexor of the elbow. quotations examples
The arm muscles are the show muscles of the physique. When someone asks to "see your muscles," they are most likely referring to your arms, and more specifically, your biceps.
1996, Robert Kennedy, Dwayne Hines II, Animal Arms, page 21
(informal) The upper arm, especially the collective muscles of the upper arm. quotations examples
Today, Stonewall's flexed biceps measure 18 inches around.
1964 Dec, “Muscles are His Business”, in Ebony, volume 20, number 2, page 147
Biting her lip, she held his biceps for balance and waded farther.
2005, Lisa Plumley, Once Upon a Christmas, page 144
Odin examined the arm-ring, then pushed it onto his arm, up high on his biceps.
2017, Neil Gaiman, Norse Mythology, Bloomsbury Publishing, page 42
(prosody) A point in a metrical pattern that can be filled either with one long syllable (a longum) or two short syllables (two brevia) quotations examples
Also it is advisable to distinguish this ( ˘ ˘ ) — ˘ ˘ — rhythm, where the princeps was probably shorter in duration than the biceps (as in the dactylic hexameter), from true (marching) anapaests, in which they were equal.
1987, Martin Litchfield West, Introduction to Greek Metre
This means that in the metrical sequence […] recited in ordinary speech rhythm, the princeps occupied a slightly shorter time than the biceps (5:6), and if a long syllable was used to fill the biceps it had to be dragged a little […]
2000, James I. Porter, Nietzsche and the Philology of the Future, page 347