corps
英 [kɔː]
美 [kɔr]
- n. 軍團;兵種;兵隊;(德國大學的)學生聯合會
- n. (Corps)人名;(西、德)科爾普斯
助記提示
1. 末尾的字母s更像是表複數,表示很多身體、很多人構成的一個整體。
中文詞源
corps 軍,軍團來自corp, 身體,實體。即成為一體的,軍團。
英文詞源
- corps (n.)
- late 13c., cors "body," from Old French cors "body, person, corpse, life" (9c.), from Latin corpus "body" (see corporeal). Sense in English evolved from "dead body" (13c.) to "live body" (14c.) to "body of citizens" (15c.) to "band of knights" (mid-15c.). The modern military sense (1704) is from French corps d'armée (16c.), picked up in English during Marlborough's campaigns.
French restored the Latin -p- in 14c., and English followed 15c., but the pronunciation remained "corse" at first and corse persisted as a parallel formation. After the -p- began to be sounded (16c. in English), corse became archaic or poetic only.
雙語例句
- 1. Encouraging teacher transfer would not, by itself, integrate the teaching corps.
- 鼓勵教師調動本身不會消弭教學隊伍中的種族隔離。
來自柯林斯例句
- 2. David McNeil is travelling with the White House press corps.
- 大衛·麥克尼爾正和白宮記者團一同前行。
來自柯林斯例句
- 3. She handled travel arrangements for the press corps during the presidential campaign.
- 她負責了總統競選活動期間新聞報道團的行程安排。
來自柯林斯例句
- 4. She was plucked from the corps de ballet to take on Juliet.
- 她從芭蕾舞團的伴舞隊中被挖掘出來,擔任朱麗葉這一角色。
來自柯林斯例句
- 5. the commander of the third army corps
- 陸軍第三軍團的指揮官
來自《權威詞典》