释义 |
cor·o·ner \ˈkȯrənə(r), ˈkär-\ noun (-s) Etymology: Middle English coroner, corowner, from Anglo-French corouner, from Old French corone, coroune crown (from Latin corona) + Anglo-French -er (from Latin -arius) — more at -er 1. : an officer of an earlier time in England whose duty was to keep a record of the pleas of the crown in a county and guard the royal revenues arising from them 2. : a public officer whose principal duty is to inquire by an inquest held in the presence of a jury into the cause of any death which there is reason to suppose is not due to natural causes — compare medical examiner 3. : a chief constable of a sheading in the Isle of Man |