释义 |
cor·pus \ˈkȯrpəs, -ȯəp-\ noun (plural corpo·ra \-p(ə)rə\) Etymology: Middle English, from Latin 1. : the body of a man or animal especially when dead 2. a. : the main part or body of a structure or organ < the corpus of the jaw > < the corpus of the uterus > b. : the main body or corporeal substance of a thing; specifically : the principal of a fund or estate as distinct from income or interest c. : the main body, the substance, or the essential element of a thing < a ferocious metaphysical dispute. The corpus of the dispute was a squirrel — William James > 3. a. : the whole body or total amount of writings of a particular kind or on a particular subject (as the total production of a writer or the whole literature of a subject) < the Dickens corpus > < judging the corpus of American literature in the light of these standards — C.I.Glicksberg > b. : a collection or body especially of knowledge or evidence < a sizable corpus of opinion > specifically : the collection of recorded utterances that is used as a basis for the descriptive analysis of a language or dialect 4. in the tunica-corpus theory : the inner of the two growth regions into which the apical meristem is considered divisible consisting of a core of cells which divide at various angles and provide for increase in bulk |