In animal anatomy, a calyx ( or calyxes; also calix; or calixes) is a cuplike area or structure.
Latin, from (from Ancient Greek , 'case of a bud, husk').
The containing the basal portion of the upper tentacular part of the polyp of some soft corals (also called calice).
A body part of the Entoprocta from which tentacles arise and the mouth and anus are located.
The body disk that is covered with a leathery tegumen containing calcareous plates (in crinoids and ophiuroids the main part of the body where the viscera are located).
Either a minor calyx in the kidney, a conglomeration of two or three minor calyces to form a major calyx, or the Calyx of Held, a particularly large synapse in the mammalian auditory central nervous system, named by H. Held in his 1893 article Die centrale Gehörleitung, due to its flower-petal-like shape.
In male insects, a funnel-shaped expansion of the basal part of the vas deferens (part of the seminal duct). Also in entomology, a flattened cap of neuropile in an insect brain (a component of the corpus pedunculatum) and by certain female insects, an expansion of the oviduct into which the ovarioles open.