stria
 oxford
 views  updated May 18 2018stria (pl. striae). 1. Flat facet in lieu of a 
flute on a column-
shaft. See 
stopped flute. 
2. Fillet between flutes of a Classical column. 
3. Rib in 
Gothic vaults. 
4. Any small channel, flute, or indentation in a series, separated by fillets, etc.
  A Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture JAMES STEVENS CURL
   stria
 oxford
 views  updated May 29 2018stri·a  / ˈstrīə/ •
n. (pl.  stri·ae / ˈstrī-ē/ )  technical  a linear mark, slight ridge, or groove on a surface, often one of a number of similar parallel features. ∎  Anat.  any of a number of longitudinal collections of nerve fibers in the brain.
 The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English 
   stria
 oxford
 views  updated Jun 27 2018stria (archit.) fillet between flutes of columns, etc. XVI; small groove, narrow stripe XVII. — L. 
stria furrow, grooving.
 Hence 
striate (
-ATE2), 
-ated (
-ED1) XVII.
  The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology T. F. HOAD
   stria
 oxford
 views  updated Jun 11 2018stria (stry-ă) n. (pl. striae) (in anatomy) a streak, line, or thin band. 
striae gravidarum stretch marks: the lines that appear on the skin of the abdomen of pregnant women, due to excessive stretching of the elastic fibres. Red or purple during pregnancy, they become white after delivery.
  A Dictionary of Nursing