corpo
Portuguese
/ˈkoɾ.pu/, /ˈkoʁ.pu/
noun
Definitions
- (anatomy) body
- corpse, cadaver
- Any limited amount of matter.
- A group of people united by a common objective; corps
- with m consistency, firmness; strength
- muscle mass
Etymology
Inherited from Old Portuguese corpo inherited from Latin corpus (body) derived from Proto-Indo-European *ḱrep-.
Origin
Proto-Indo-European
*ḱrep-
Gloss
Timeline
Distribution of cognates by language
Geogrpahic distribution of cognates
Cognates and derived terms
- corporify English
- corpus English
- corpus cavernosum English
- Lupercī Latin
- corporalis Latin
- corporeus Latin
- corporicida Latin
- corporo Latin
- corporālis Latin
- corpulentus Latin
- corpus Latin
- Korpus German
- korpusz Hungarian
- caporale Italian
- corpo Italian
- corpus Dutch, Flemish
- corps French
- corps d'armée French
- cors French
- ко́рпус Russian
- корпус Russian
- acuerpar Spanish, Castilian
- anticuerpo Spanish, Castilian
- corpachón Spanish, Castilian
- corpus Spanish, Castilian
- cuerpazo Spanish, Castilian
- cuerpito Spanish, Castilian
- cuerpo Spanish, Castilian
- microcuerpo Spanish, Castilian
- *h₁lengʷʰ- Proto-Indo-European
- *krep- Proto-Indo-European
- *kʷrép-o- Proto-Indo-European
- *legʷʰ- Proto-Indo-European
- *ḱrep- Proto-Indo-European
- antianticorpo Portuguese
- anticorpo Portuguese
- autoanticorpo Portuguese
- corpus Portuguese
- encorpar Portuguese
- korpus Swedish
- korpus Polish
- korpus Czech
- cors Old French
- korpo Esperanto
- korpus Serbo-Croatian
- corpus Catalan, Valencian
- corpo Galician
- corp Romanian, Moldavian, Moldovan
- corff Welsh
- korpo Ido
- corp Old Irish
- körper Middle High German
- korpus Estonian
- corpo Old Portuguese
- *korpos Proto-Italic
- corp Romansh
- cuerpu Asturian
- cuarp Friulian
- cors Old Occitan
- corpu Sicilian
- kurpa Papiamentu
- gorputz Basque
- cuarp Dalmatian
- korpu Kabuverdianu
- corps Bourguignon
- kerper Vilamovian
- corpus Sardinian
- cuorpo Istriot
- kurpu Guinea-Bissau Creole
- cors Picard