English-Thai Dictionary
corpus
N คลังข้อมูล การ รวบรวม งานเขียน หรือ ข้อมูล คำ klang-kor-mun
corpus
N ส่วน ของ ร่างกาย suan-kong-rang-kai
corpus
N ส่วนสำคัญ suan-sam-kan
corpuscle
N อนุภาค อ ณู ส่วน เล็กๆ ar-nu-pak
corpuscle
N เซลล์ ที่ เคลื่อน ได้ อิสระ sel-ti-kluean-dai-id-sa-ra
corpuscule
N อนุภาค เม็ด เลือด corpuscle
Webster's 1828 Dictionary
CORPUSCLE
n.[L., body. ] A minute particle, or physical atom; corpuscles are the very small bodies which compose large bodies, not the elementary principles of matter, but such small particles simple or compound, as are not dissolved or dissipated by ordinary heat. It will add much to our satisfaction, if those corpuscles can be discovered by microscopes.
CORPUSCULAR
a.Relating to corpuscles, or small particles, supposed to be the constituent materials of all large bodies. The corpuscular philosophy attempts to account for the phenomena of nature, by the motion, figure, rest, position, etc. , of the minute particles of matter.
CORPUSCULARIAN
a.Corpuscular, as above.
CORPUSCULARIAN
n.An advocate for the corpuscular philosophy.
Webster's 1913 Dictionary
CORPUS
Cor "pus (-ps ), n.; pl. Corpora (-p. Etym: [L.]
Defn: A body, living or dead; the corporeal substance of a thing. Corpus callosum (k; pl. Corpora callosa (-s Etym: [NL. , callous body ] (Anat. ), the great band of commissural fibers uniting the cerebral hemispheries. See Brain. -- Corpus Christi (kr Etym: [L., body of Christ ] (R. C. Ch. ), a festival in honor of the eucharist, observed on the Thursday after Trinity Sunday. -- Corpus Christi cloth. Same as Pyx cloth, under Pyx. -- Corpus delicti (d Etym: [L., the body of the crime ] (Law ), the substantial and fundamental fact of the comission of a crime; the proofs essential to establish a crime. -- Corpus luteum (l; pl. Corpora lutea (-. Etym: [NL. , luteous body ](Anat. ), the reddish yellow mass which fills a ruptured Grafian follicle in the mammalian ovary. -- Corpus striatum (str; pl. Corpora striata (-t. Etym: [NL. , striate body ] (Anat. ), a ridge in the wall of each lateral ventricle of the brain.
CORPUSCLE
Cor "pus *cle (-ps-s'l ), n. Etym: [L. corpusculum, dim. of corpus. ]
1. A minute particle; an atom; a molecule.
2. (Anat. )
Defn: A protoplasmic animal cell; esp. , such as float free, like blood, lymph, and pus corpuscles; or such as are imbedded in an intercellular matrix, like connective tissue and cartilage corpuscles. See Blood. Virchow showed that the corpuscles of bone are homologous with those of connective tissue. Quain's Anat. Red blood corpuscles (Physiol.), in man, yellowish, biconcave, circular discs varying from 1 /35 to 1 /32 of an inch in diameter and about 1 /124 of an inch thick. They are composed of a colorless stroma filled in with semifluid hæmoglobin and other matters. In most mammals the red corpuscles are circular, but in the camels, birds, reptiles, and the lower vertebrates generally, they are oval, and sometimes more or less spherical in form. In Amphioxus, and most invertebrates, the blood corpuscles are all white or colorless. -- White blood corpuscles (Physiol.), rounded, slightly flattened, nucleated cells, mainly protoplasmic in composition, and possessed of contractile power. In man, the average size is about 1 /25 of an inch, and they are present in blood in much smaller numbers than the red corpuscles.
CORPUSCULAR
Cor *pus "cu *lar (kr-ps "k-lr ), a. Etym: [Cf. F. corpusculaire.]
Defn: Pertaining to, or composed of, corpuscles, or small particles. Corpuscular philosophy, that which attempts to account for the phenomena of nature, by the motion, figure, rest, position, etc. , of the minute particles of matter. -- Corpuscular theory (Opt. ), the theory enunciated by Sir Isaac Newton, that light consists in the emission and rapid progression of minute particles or corpuscles. The theory is now generally rejected, and supplanted by the undulatory theory.
CORPUSCULARIAN
CORPUSCULARIAN Cor *pus `cu *la "ri *an (-l "r-an ), a.
Defn: Corpuscular. [Obs. ]
CORPUSCULARIAN
CORPUSCULARIAN Cor *pus `cu *la "ri *an, n.
Defn: An adherent of the corpuscular philosophy. Bentley.
CORPUSCULE
CORPUSCULE Cor *pus "cule (kr-ps "kl ), n.
Defn: A corpuscle. [Obs. ]
CORPUSCULOUS
CORPUSCULOUS Cor *pus "cu *lous (-k-ls ), a.
Defn: Corpuscular. Tyndall.
New American Oxford Dictionary
corpus
cor pus |ˈkôrpəs ˈkɔrpəs | ▶noun ( pl. corpora |-pərə | or corpuses ) 1 a collection of written texts, esp. the entire works of a particular author or a body of writing on a particular subject: the Darwinian corpus. • a collection of written or spoken material in machine-readable form, assembled for the purpose of studying linguistic structures, frequencies, etc. 2 Anatomy the main body or mass of a structure. • the central part of the stomach, between the fundus and the antrum. ORIGIN late Middle English (denoting a human or animal body ): from Latin, literally ‘body. ’ Sense 1 dates from the early 18th cent.
corpus callosum
cor pus cal lo sum |kaˈlōsəm ˌkɔrpəs kəˈloʊsəm | ▶noun ( pl. corpora callosa |ˈkôrpərə kaˈlōsə | ) Anatomy a broad band of nerve fibers joining the two hemispheres of the brain. ORIGIN early 18th cent.: from corpus and Latin callosum, neuter of callosus ‘tough. ’
corpus cavernosum
cor pus ca ver no sum |ˌkavərˈnōsəm ˌkɔrpəs ˌkævərˈnoʊsəm | ▶noun ( pl. corpora cavernosa |-ˈnōsə | ) Anatomy either of two masses of erectile tissue forming the bulk of the penis and the clitoris. ORIGIN from corpus and Latin cavernosum, neuter of cavernosus ‘containing hollows. ’
Corpus Christi
Cor pus Chris ti 1 |ˌkôrpəs ˈkristē ˌkɔrpəs ˈkrɪsti | a city and port in southern Texas, on Corpus Christi Bay; pop. 286,462 (est. 2008 ).
Corpus Christi
Cor pus Chris ti 2 |ˌkɔrpəs ˈkrɪsti ˌkôrpəs ˈkristē | a feast of the Western Christian Church commemorating the institution of the Eucharist, observed on the Thursday after Trinity Sunday. ORIGIN Latin, literally ‘body of Christ. ’
corpuscle
cor pus cle |ˈkôrˌpəsəl ˈkɔrˌpəsəl | ▶noun Biology a minute body or cell in an organism, esp. a red or white cell in the blood of vertebrates. • historical a minute particle regarded as the basic constituent of matter or light. DERIVATIVES cor pus cu lar |kôrˈpəskyələr |adjective ORIGIN mid 17th cent.: from Latin corpusculum ‘small body, ’ diminutive of corpus .
corpus delicti
cor pus de lic ti |dəˈlikˌtī, -tē ˌkɔrpəs dəˈlɪktaɪ | ▶noun Law the facts and circumstances constituting a breach of a law. • concrete evidence of a crime, such as a corpse. ORIGIN Latin, literally ‘body of offense. ’
corpus luteum
cor pus lu te um |ˈlo͞otēəm ˌkɔrpəs ˈludiəm | ▶noun ( pl. corpora lutea |ˈlo͞otēə | ) Anatomy a hormone-secreting structure that develops in an ovary after an ovum has been discharged but degenerates after a few days unless pregnancy has begun. ORIGIN late 18th cent.: from corpus and Latin luteum, neuter of luteus ‘yellow. ’
corpus spongiosum
cor pus spon gi o sum |ˌspənjēˈōsəm ˌkɔrpəs ˈspənʤiˌoʊsəm | ▶noun ( pl. corpora spongiosa |ˌspənjēˈōsə | ) Anatomy a mass of erectile tissue alongside the corpora cavernosa of the penis and terminating in the glans. ORIGIN from corpus and Latin spongiosum, neuter of spongiosus ‘porous. ’
corpus striatum
cor pus stri a tum |strīˈātəm ˌkɔrpəs straɪˈeɪdəm | ▶noun ( pl. corpora striata |strīˈātə | ) Anatomy part of the basal ganglia of the brain, comprising the caudate and lentiform nuclei. ORIGIN from corpus and Latin striatum, neuter of striatus ‘grooved. ’
Oxford Dictionary
corpus
corpus |ˈkɔːpəs | ▶noun ( pl. corpora |ˈkɔːpərə | or corpuses ) 1 a collection of written texts, especially the entire works of a particular author or a body of writing on a particular subject: the Darwinian corpus. • a collection of written or spoken material in machine-readable form, assembled for the purpose of linguistic research. 2 Anatomy the main body or mass of a structure. • the central part of the stomach, between the fundus and the antrum. ORIGIN late Middle English (denoting a human or animal body ): from Latin, literally ‘body ’. Sense 1 dates from the early 18th cent.
corpus callosum
corpus callosum |kəˈləʊsəm | ▶noun ( pl. corpora callosa |-sə | ) Anatomy a broad band of nerve fibres joining the two hemispheres of the brain. ORIGIN early 18th cent.: from corpus and Latin callosum, neuter of callosus ‘tough ’.
corpus cavernosum
corpus cavernosum |ˌkavəˈnəʊsəm | ▶noun ( pl. corpora cavernosa |-sə | ) Anatomy either of two masses of erectile tissue forming the bulk of the penis and the clitoris. ORIGIN from corpus and Latin cavernosum, neuter of cavernosus ‘containing hollows ’.
Corpus Christi
Corpus Christi 1 |ˌkɔːpəs ˈkrɪsti | a city and port in southern Texas; pop. 286,462 (est. 2008 ). It is situated on Corpus Christi Bay, an inlet of the Gulf of Mexico.
Corpus Christi
Corpus Christi 2 |ˌkɔːpəs ˈkrɪsti | ▶noun a feast of the Western Christian Church commemorating the institution of the Eucharist, observed on the Thursday after Trinity Sunday. ORIGIN Latin, literally ‘body of Christ ’.
corpuscle
corpuscle |ˈkɔːpʌs (ə )l | ▶noun Biology a minute body or cell in an organism, especially a red or white cell in the blood of vertebrates. • historical a minute particle regarded as the basic constituent of matter or light. DERIVATIVES corpuscular |kɔːˈpʌskjʊlə |adjective ORIGIN mid 17th cent.: from Latin corpusculum ‘small body ’, diminutive of corpus .
corpus delicti
corpus delicti |dɪˈlɪktʌɪ | ▶noun Law the facts and circumstances constituting a crime. • concrete evidence of a crime, such as a corpse. ORIGIN Latin, literally ‘body of offence ’.
corpus luteum
corpus luteum |ˈluːtɪəm | ▶noun ( pl. corpora lutea |ˈluːtɪə | ) Anatomy a hormone-secreting structure that develops in an ovary after an ovum has been discharged but degenerates after a few days unless pregnancy has begun. ORIGIN late 18th cent.: from corpus and Latin luteum, neuter of luteus ‘yellow ’.
corpus spongiosum
corpus spongiosum |ˌspʌndʒɪˈəʊsəm | ▶noun ( pl. corpora spongiosa |-sə | ) Anatomy a mass of erectile tissue alongside the corpora cavernosa of the penis and terminating in the glans. ORIGIN from corpus and Latin spongiosum, neuter of spongiosus ‘porous ’.
corpus striatum
corpus striatum |strʌɪˈeɪtəm | ▶noun ( pl. corpora striata |-tə | ) Anatomy part of the basal ganglia of the brain, comprising the caudate and lentiform nuclei. ORIGIN from corpus and Latin striatum, neuter of striatus ‘grooved ’.
Oxford Thesaurus
corpus
corpus noun his work has no parallel in the whole corpus of Renaissance poetry: collection, compilation, body, entity, whole, aggregation, mass.
Duden Dictionary
Corpus
Cor pus Substantiv, Neutrum , das |C o rpus |das Corpus; Genitiv: des Corpus, Plural: die Corpora lateinisch corpus 1 Medizin Hauptteil eines Organs oder Körperteils 2 Korpus
Corpus Christi
Cor pus Chris ti Substantiv, Neutrum katholische Kirche , das |C o rpus Chr i sti |das Corpus Christi; Genitiv: des Corpus Christi lateinisch Leib Christi als Altarsakrament
Corpus Christi mysticum
Cor pus Chris ti mys ti cum Substantiv, Neutrum katholische Kirche , das |C o rpus Chr i sti m y sticum - - …kʊm |das Corpus Christi mysticum; Genitiv: des Corpus Christi mysticum lateinisch [die Kirche als ] der mystische Leib Christi
Corpusculum
Cor pus cu lum Substantiv, Neutrum Medizin , das |Corp u sculum |das Corpusculum; Genitiv: des Corpusculums, Plural: die Corpuscula meist im Plural kleines Gebilde im Organismus
Corpus Delicti
Cor pus De lic ti Substantiv, Neutrum Rechtssprache , das |C o rpus Del i cti |das Corpus Delicti; Corpus Delicti, Corpora Delicti lateinisch = Gesamttatbestand eines Vergehens Gegenstand (Werkzeug ), mit dem eine Straftat, ein Verbrechen begangen worden ist und der dem Gericht als Beweisstück dient der Staatsanwalt legte das Corpus Delicti vor
Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum
Cor pus In s c rip ti o num La ti na rum , Cor pus In scrip ti o num La ti na rum Substantiv, Neutrum , das |C o rpus Inscripti o num Latin a rum |das Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum; Genitiv: des Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum maßgebliche Sammlung der lateinischen Inschriften der Römerzeit Abkürzung: CIL
Corpus Iuris
Cor pus Iu ris Substantiv, Neutrum Rechtssprache , das |C o rpus I u ris |das Corpus Iuris; Genitiv: des Corpus Iuris lateinisch Gesetzbuch, -sammlung
Corpus Iuris Canonici
Cor pus Iu ris Ca no ni ci , Cor pus Ju ris Ca no ni ci Substantiv, Neutrum , das Corpus Juris Canonici |C o rpus I u ris Can o nici C o rpus J u ris Can o nici - ˈjuːris kaˈnoːnit͜si - ˈjuːris kaˈnoːnit͜si |das Corpus Iuris Canonici; Genitiv: des Corpus Iuris Canonici das Corpus Juris Canonici; Genitiv: des Corpus Juris Canonici bis 1918 allein gültige Sammlung des katholischen Kirchenrechts; vgl. Codex Iuris Canonici
Corpus Iuris Civilis
Cor pus Iu ris Ci vi lis Substantiv, Neutrum , das |C o rpus I u ris Civilis - - t͜siˈviː …|das Corpus Iuris Civilis; Genitiv: des Corpus Iuris Civilis von dem oströmischen Kaiser Justinian im 6. Jahrhundert n. Chr. veranlasste Sammlung der damals geltenden Rechtsvorschriften
Corpus luteum
Cor pus lu te um Substantiv, Neutrum Medizin , das |C o rpus l u teum |das Corpus luteum; Genitiv: des Corpus luteum Gelbkörper des Eierstocks
Corpus Reformatorum
Cor pus Re for ma to rum Substantiv, Neutrum , das |C o rpus Reformat o rum |das Corpus Reformatorum; Genitiv: des Corpus Reformatorum Gesamtausgabe der Schriften der Reformatoren mit Ausnahme der Schriften Luthers Abkürzung: CR
French Dictionary
corpus
corpus n. m. nom masculin linguistique Ensemble des éléments sur lesquels porte une recherche linguistique. Prononciation Le s se prononce, [kɔrpys ]
corpuscule
corpuscule n. m. nom masculin Très petit corps. Note Sémantique Ne pas confondre avec les noms suivants: • atome, la plus petite quantité de matière susceptible de se combiner; • molécule, la plus petite partie d ’un corps qui puisse exister à l ’état libre; • particule, corps d ’une extrême petitesse.
Spanish Dictionary
corpus
corpus nombre masculino 1 ling Conjunto cerrado de textos o de datos destinado a la investigación científica :este diccionario está elaborado a partir de un corpus de textos compuesto por más de diez millones de palabras .2 lit Recopilación de los escritos de un autor, de una serie de leyes, etcétera .ETIMOLOGÍA Préstamo del latín corpus .El plural es corpus .
corpuscular
corpuscular adjetivo 1 De los corpúsculos o relacionado con ellos .2 Que está compuesto de corpúsculos :la naturaleza corpuscular de la luz .3 [sistema físico ] Que admite por materia elemental los corpúsculos .
corpúsculo
corpúsculo nombre masculino Partícula de materia de tamaño microscópico :el núcleo de una célula es un corpúsculo .
Sanseido Wisdom Dictionary
corpus
cor pus /kɔ́ː r pəs /名詞 複 corpora /kɔ́ː r p (ə )rə /, ~es /-ɪz /C 1 ⦅かたく ⦆(特定の種類 作家の文書 [資料 ]の )集大成, 集積 .2 〘言 〙言語資料 (の集積 ), コーパス .3 〘解剖 〙体 (たい ).4 (人間 動物の )体 ; 死体 .C -̀ Chr í sti /-krɪ́sti /〘カトリック 〙キリスト聖体の祝日 〘Trinity Sundayの次の木曜日 〙.
corpuscle
cor pus cle /kɔ́ː r pʌs (ə )l /名詞 C 〖通例 ~s 〗血球 ▸ red [white ] corpuscles 赤 [白 ]血球 cor p ú s cu lar 形容詞