a term used by some authors, for the small meatuses or interstices of bodies; or the little clefts between the particles; especially when those particles are broadish and flat, and lie contiguous to one another, like thin plates or lamellae. The word literally signifies a joining, or connecting of one thing to another.
architecture, &c. denotes the joint of two stones, or the application of the surface of the one to that of the other. See Masonry.
Among anatomists, commissure is sometimes also used for a fissure of the cranium or skull. See Suture.