English edit

Noun edit

corpi

  1. (hypercorrect) plural of corpus
    • 1977, Vincent J. Maglio, Dental and Skeletal Morphology of the Earliest Elephants, page 33:
      The corpus is massive, being deeper anteriorly and shallowest where the ramus takes origin. The corpi of both sides are more closely spaced to each other than in the living form, and the symphysis is narrower.
    • 1997, Tilde Binger, Asherah: Goddesses in Ugarit, Israel and the Old Testament, page 147:
      Or, framed more traditionally, 'who or what is Asherah in the three corpi of texts that this book deals with?'
    • 2017, Daniel Hood, Redemption and Recovery: Further Parallels of Religion and Science in Addiction Treatment:
      Well, certainly, I can summarize what I have done in the five chapters in this book and how that fits into the larger argument of the entire corpus...or two corpi.

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Italian edit

Noun edit

corpi m

  1. plural of corpo

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