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corse. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
corse, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
corse in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
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English
Etymology
From Middle English cors, from Old French cors, from Latin corpus (“body”). Doublet of corpus and corpse, and distantly of riff. Compare corset.
Pronunciation
Noun
corse (plural corses)
- (obsolete) A (living) body.
- (archaic) A dead body, a corpse.
c. 1599–1602 (date written), William Shake-speare, The Tragicall Historie of Hamlet, Prince of Denmarke: (First Quarto), London: [Valentine Simmes] for N L and Iohn Trundell, published 1603, →OCLC, [Act I, scene iv], signature C3, recto:[W]hat may this meane, / That thou, dead corſe, againe in compleate ſteele, / Reuiſſits thus the glimſes of the Moone, / Making night hideous, and vve fooles of nature, / So horridely to ſhake our diſpoſition, / VVith thoughts beyond the reaches of our ſoules?
1796, Matthew Lewis, The Monk, Folio Society, published 1985, page 214:Ambrosio beheld before him that once noble and majestic form, now become a corse, cold, senseless, and disgusting.
1838, Thomas Eagles, Brendallah, A Poem, Whittaker & Co., section LXIII, page 112:'Twas then attested that he had been found / At no great distance from the bleeding corse
, Sophocles, translated by [William Bartholomew], An Imitative Version of the Choruses and the Melo-Dramatic Dialogue, with a Synopsis of the Scenes in Sophocles’ Tragedy Antigone; , London: Joseph Bonsor, , page 21:chorus. Thine eyes will tell thee!—Yonder, see the lifeless corse. The Scene opens and discovers the corse of the Queen, her attendants weeping around it. creon. Alas! O new calamity! What more / Of ill hath Fate in store for me? Here, here / Within these arms I clasp my lifeless son: / And yonder see my wife a bleeding corse!
Derived terms
Anagrams
French
Pronunciation
Adjective
corse (plural corses)
- Corsican
Noun
corse m (uncountable)
- Corsican (language)
Verb
corse
- inflection of corser:
- first/third-person singular present indicative/subjunctive
- second-person singular imperative
Further reading
Anagrams
Italian
Etymology 1
Pronunciation
Noun
corse f
- plural of corsa (“race, trip”)
Etymology 2
Pronunciation
Verb
corse
- third-person singular past historic of correre
Etymology 3
Pronunciation
Participle
corse f pl
- feminine plural of corso (“having run”)
Etymology 4
Pronunciation
Adjective
corse
- feminine plural of corso (“Corsican”)
Noun
corse f
- plural of corsa (“female Corsican”)
Anagrams
Latin
Adjective
corse
- vocative singular masculine of corsus