单词 | corpus |
释义 | corpusn. 1. The body of a person or animal. (Cf. corpse n. 1.)Formerly frequent; now only humorous or grotesque. ΘΚΠ the world > life > the body > [noun] lichamc888 bodyeOE earthOE lichOE bone houseOE dustc1000 fleshOE utter mana1050 bonesOE bodiȝlichc1175 bouka1225 bellyc1275 slimec1315 corpsec1325 vesselc1360 tabernaclec1374 carrion1377 corsec1386 personc1390 claya1400 carcass1406 lump of claya1425 sensuality?a1425 corpusc1440 God's imagea1450 bulka1475 natural body1526 outward man1526 quarrons1567 blood bulk1570 skinfula1592 flesh-rind1593 clod1595 anatomy1597 veil1598 microcosm1601 machine1604 outwall1608 lay part1609 machina1612 cabinet1614 automaton1644 case1655 mud wall1662 structure1671 soul case1683 incarnation1745 personality1748 personage1785 man1830 embodiment1850 flesh-stuff1855 corporeity1865 chassis1930 soma1958 the world > life > the body > dead body > [noun] lichc893 dust?a1000 holdc1000 bonesOE stiff onea1200 bodyc1225 carrion?c1225 licham?c1225 worms' food or ware?c1225 corsec1250 ashc1275 corpsec1315 carcass1340 murraina1382 relicsa1398 ghostc1400 wormes warec1400 corpusc1440 scadc1440 reliefc1449 martc1480 cadaverc1500 mortc1500 tramort?a1513 hearse1530 bulk1575 offal1581 trunk1594 cadaverie1600 relicts1607 remains1610 mummya1616 relic1636 cold meat1788 mortality1827 death bone1834 deader1853 stiff1859 c1440 York Myst. xxxiii. 430 We ar combered his corpus for to cary. 1490 W. Caxton tr. Eneydos li. (1890) 143 They came wyth the corpus, makyng gret mone. 1531 in W. H. Turner Select. Rec. Oxf. (1880) 104 He was lothe to goe and see the ded corpus. 1709 Brit. Apollo 27 May–1 June His Corpus (Now bulky as Porpus). 1799 Piece Fam. Biogr. II. 108 They ate up his corpus, his hands and his feet. 1849 E. Bulwer-Lytton King Arthur ix. xcvi A sick polypus..Stretch'd out its claws to incorporate my corpus. a1854 Villikins & his Dinah in Mus. Bouquet No. 452 He kissed her cold corpus a thousand times o'er. 2. Physiology. A structure of a special character or function in the animal body, as corpus callosum, the transverse commissure connecting the cerebral hemispheres; so also corpora quadrigemina, corpora striata, etc. of the brain, corpus spongiosum and corpora cavernosa of the penis, etc.; corpus luteum [ < Latin luteus, luteum yellow] (plural corpora lutea), a yellowish body developed in the ovary from the ruptured Graafian follicle after discharge of the ovum; it secretes progesterone and other hormones and after a few days degenerates unless fertilization has occurred, when it remains throughout pregnancy. ΘΚΠ the world > life > the body > system > [noun] > organ instrumenta1398 organ?a1425 instrumental?1541 organon1583 organum1614 corpus1706 apparatus1718 the world > life > the body > nervous system > cerebrospinal axis > brain > parts of brain > [noun] > commissure commissure1695 corpus callosum1706 optic commissure1848 optic chiasma1856 supracommissure1886 the world > life > biology > biological processes > procreation or reproduction > reproductive substances or cells > [noun] > ovum or ootid > Graafian follicle, etc. corpus luteum1788 ovarian follicle1834 Graafian follicle1841 theca folliculi1857 corona radiata1869 stigma1890 1706 Phillips's New World of Words (new ed.) Corpus Callosum (in Anat.) is the upper Part, or Covering of a Space made by the joyning together of the right and left Side of the inward Substance of the Brain. 1788 Encycl. Brit. I. 740/2 In conception, one of these mature ova is supposed..to be squeezed out of its nidus into the Fallopian tube; after which the ruptured part forms a substance which in some animals is of a yellow colour, and is therefore called corpus luteum. 1851 W. B. Carpenter Man. Physiol. (1865) 581 The ganglionic matter of the Corpora Striata. 1869 T. H. Huxley Lessons Elem. Physiol. (ed. 3) xi. 298 The floor of the lateral ventricle is formed by a mass of nervous matter, called the corpus striatum. 1874 W. B. Carpenter Princ. Mental Physiol. (1879) App. 715 Experiments on the Corpora Quadrigemina (or Optic Ganglia). 1910 Surg., Gynecol. & Obstetr. 10 221/2 (heading) Extract of corpus luteum in disturbances of artificial and physiologic menopause. 1910 Surg., Gynecol. & Obstetr. 10 221/2 An extract made from the corpora lutea of beef ovaries [was used] rather than an extract of the entire ovary. 1926 J. S. Huxley Ess. Pop. Sci. v. 60 The number of corpora lutea, or traces of discharged ova in the ovaries. 1939 Ann. Reg. 1938 372 Corpus luteum hormone and its derivatives. 1959 New Biol. 30 79 As in mammals, glandular bodies known as corpora lutea are produced in the ovaries of viviparous (and also of some oviparous) reptiles, in places from which the eggs have been shed at ovulation. 3. a. A body or complete collection of writings or the like; the whole body of literature on any subject. ΘΚΠ society > leisure > the arts > literature > [noun] > body of literature on a subject corpus1728 literature1797 1728 E. Chambers Cycl. Corpus, is also used in Matters of Learning, for several Works of the same Nature, collected, join'd, and bound together... The Corpus of the Civil Law is compos'd of the Digest, Code, and Institutes... We have also a Corpus of the Greek Poets. 1865 J. B. Mozley 8 Lect. Miracles i. 16 Bound up inseparably with the whole corpus of Christian tradition. 1876 W. E. Gladstone in Contemp. Rev. June 14 Assaults on the corpus of Scripture. 1886 Athenæum 14 Aug. 211/1 The completion of such a corpus of Oriental numismatics. b. The body of written or spoken material upon which a linguistic analysis is based. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > linguistics > [noun] > material for linguistic analysis corpus1956 1956 W. S. Allen in Trans. Philol. Soc. 128 The analysis here presented is based on the speech of a single informant..and in particular upon a corpus of material, of which a large proportion was narrative, derived from approximately 100 hours of listening. 1963 Language 39 1 In the analysis of the data, the structural features of the corpora will first be described. 1964 E. Palmer tr. A. Martinet Elements Gen. Linguistics ii. 40 The theoretical objection one may make against the ‘corpus’ method is that two investigators operating on the same language but starting from different ‘corpuses’, may arrive at different descriptions of the same language. 1971 J. B. Carroll et al. Word Frequency Bk. p. xxvii How many types does one have to ‘know’ to know 95% of the tokens in the population of texts from which a corpus has been derived? 1983 G. Leech et al. in Trans. Philol. Soc. 25 We hope that this will be judged..as an attempt to explore the possibilities and problems of corpus-based research by reference to first-hand experience, instead of by a general survey. 4. The body or material substance of anything; principal, as opposed to interest or income. ΘΚΠ society > trade and finance > financial dealings > types of money-dealing > [noun] > provision of capital > capital or principal cattlec1330 chief moneyc1390 principal1390 chattel1502 stock1526 capital1569 capital stock1569 nest-egg1801 corpus1844 1844 J. Williams Princ. Law Real Property (1877) 225 Not only the income, but also the corpus of any property, whether real or personal. 1884 Law Rep.: Chancery Div. 25 711 If these costs were properly incurred they ought to be paid out of corpus and not out of income. 5. corpus delicti (see quot. a1859); also, in lay use, the concrete evidence of a crime, esp. the body of a murdered person. corpus juris: a body of law; esp. the body of Roman or civil law ( corpus juris civilis). ΘΚΠ society > law > system of laws > [noun] lawa1000 corps of lawc1380 pandect1553 jurisprudence1656 legislation1659 corpus juris1705 corps diplomatique1796 law-system1880 adversary system1912 society > law > rule of law > lawlessness > [noun] > violation of law > a violation of the law > aggregate of ingredients constituting corpus delicti1705 society > law > administration of justice > court proceedings or procedure > evidence > [noun] > incontrovertible or incriminating goods1771 corpus delicti1922 smoking pistol1974 1705 Tryal Capt. Thomas Green 17 1705 _The Tryal of Capt. Thomas Green and His CrewThere was here no corpus delicti, visible Effect or Subject of the Crime, offered to be proven, which is always necessary. a1859 J. Austin Lect. Jurispr. (1879) I. xxiv. 479 Corpus delicti (a phrase introduced by certain modern civilians) is a collective name for the sum or aggregate of the various ingredients which make a given fact a breach of a given law. 1863 N.Y. State Court of Appeals, Rep. IV. 179 The corpus delicti, in murder, has two components, death as the result and the criminal agency of another as the means. 1869 R. Campbell Austin's Lect. Jurispr. (ed. 3) II. xlv. 796 The very best attempts yet made to distribute the corpus juris into parts. 1891 Fortn. Rev. Sept. 338 The translation..of the Corpus Juris into French. 1908 J. Hawthorne Libr. Best Myst. & Detective Stories 89 The term ‘corpus delicti’ is technical, and means the body of the crime, or the substantial fact that a crime has been committed. 1922 J. Joyce Ulysses ii. xv. [Circe] 435 (He extends his portfolio.) We have here damning evidence, the corpus delicti, my lord, a specimen of my maturer work disfigured by the hallmark of the beast. 1964 Sunday Mail Mag. (Brisbane) 13 Sept. 3/3 An enthusiastic trooper, one of a party investigating river, dam and hollow log in search of the corpus delicti, found some important evidence in a fallen tree. ΘΚΠ the mind > language > malediction > oaths > [interjection] > religious oaths (referring to God) > God's bones by corpus bonesc1386 cock's bonesc1405 God's bonesc1410 od's bonesa1895 c1386 G. Chaucer Pardoner's Prol. 28 By corpus [2 MSS. corps] bones, but I haue triacle. c1386 G. Chaucer Prioress' Prol. 1 (Harl.) ‘Wel sayd, by corpus boones [6 texts corpus dominus]!’ quod oure host. c1386 G. Chaucer Monk's Prol. 18 By corpus [Harl. corpes Petworth goddes] bones, I wol haue thy knyf. Draft additions 1997 b. Botany. [Introduced in this sense (in German) by A. Schmidt 1924, in Bot. Archiv (Berlin) VIII. 352.] The inner mass of cells in an apical meristem, which are enclosed by the tunica and whose division contributes to the increase in volume of a plant. ΘΚΠ the world > plants > part of plant > cell or aggregate tissue > [noun] > tissue > meristem > mass of cells in corpus1939 1939 Bot. Rev. 5 460 The growth of the central core or corpus, by contrast, consists in an increase in mass. 1958 Jrnl. Faculty Sci. Univ. Tokyo 7 368 Two tissue zones occur in the apical meristem, that is, the tunica, consisting of one or more periclinal layers of cells, and the corpus, a mass of cells enclosed by the tunica. 1965 K. Esau Plant Anat. (ed. 2) v. 94 Although the epidermis usually arises from the outermost tunica layer..,the underlying tissues may have their origin in the tunica or the corpus or both. 1984 L. W. Browder Developmental Biol. (ed. 2) xiii. 647 The tunica and corpus are thought to be maintained by division of the initial cells contained within them. Draft additions September 2013 corpus linguistics n. the branch of linguistics concerned with analysis of corpora as a means of studying language; cf. sense 3b. ΚΠ 1959 Internat. Jrnl. Amer. Linguistics 25 216/2 This certainly is the assumption behind linguistic statements derived wholly from texts. By definition, this means closed corpus linguistics, formerly known as philology.] 1979 Slavonic & East European Rev. 57 149 The various problems and methods occurring on the level of TGG theory, such as competence and performance, corpus linguistics, the ‘well-formedness’ of utterances.., and so forth. 1988 N. Belmore in M. Kytö et al. Corpus Linguistics, Hard & Soft 71 Within recent years.., the potential for fruitful cooperation between specialists in corpus linguistics and specialists in information processing has come to be recognized. 2011 M. Baker & L. Pérez-González in J. Simpson Routledge Handbk. Appl. Linguistics iii. 41 Corpus linguistics has provided a robust methodology for studying translation since the mid-1990s. This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1893; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < n.c1386 |
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