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单词 corpse
释义

corpsen.

Brit. /kɔːps/, /kɔːs/, U.S. /kɔrps/
Forms: Formerly Middle English–1700s corps; also 1500s–1600s corpes, Scottish corpis.
Etymology: Middle English corps , originally merely a variant spelling of the earlier Middle English cors (see corse n.), < Old French (11–14th cent.) cors = Provençal cors < Latin corpus body. In the 14th cent. the spelling of Old French cors was perverted after Latin to corps , and this fashion came also into English, where corps is found side by side with cors , and became gradually (by 1500) the prevalent, and at length the ordinary form, while at the same time cors , from 16th cent. spelt corse n., has never become obsolete. In French the p is a mere bad spelling, which has never affected the pronunciation. In English also, at first, the p was mute, corps being only a fancy spelling of cors ; but apparently by the end of the 15th cent. (in some parts of the country, or with some speakers) the p began to be pronounced, and this became at length the ordinary practice; though even at the present day some who write corpse pronounce corse , at least in reading. The spelling with final e , corpse (perhaps taken from the modern plural corpses ) was only a rare and casual variation before the 19th cent., in which it has become the accepted form in the surviving sense 2, which is thus differentiated < corps n.1, used with French pronunciation in the military sense. In French cors, corps the plural is the same as the singular; in English also the ordinary plural down to 1750 was corps, though corpses is occasional from 16th cent. In the 17th cent. corps meaning a single dead body was often construed as a plural = ‘remains’, as is still the case dialectally; in Scots, corps plural gave rise to a truncated singular corp before 1500. Comparing the history of French cors, corps, and that of English cors, corps, corpse, we see that while modern French /kɔr/ has in pronunciation lost the final s, English has not only retained it, but pronounces the p, and adds a final e mute, which is neither etymological nor phonetic, but serves to distinguish the word from the special sense spelt corps and pronounced /kɔə(r)/.
1. The body of a person or of an animal; a (living) body; a person. Obsolete (before the spelling corpse was established.)
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > the body > [noun]
lichamc888
bodyeOE
earthOE
lichOE
bone houseOE
dustc1000
fleshOE
utter mana1050
bonesOE
bodiȝlichc1175
bouka1225
bellyc1275
slimec1315
corpsec1325
vesselc1360
tabernaclec1374
carrion1377
corsec1386
personc1390
claya1400
carcass1406
lump of claya1425
sensuality?a1425
corpusc1440
God's imagea1450
bulka1475
natural body1526
outward man1526
quarrons1567
blood bulk1570
skinfula1592
flesh-rind1593
clod1595
anatomy1597
veil1598
microcosm1601
machine1604
outwall1608
lay part1609
machina1612
cabinet1614
automaton1644
case1655
mud wall1662
structure1671
soul case1683
incarnation1745
personality1748
personage1785
man1830
embodiment1850
flesh-stuff1855
corporeity1865
chassis1930
soma1958
c1325 Coer de L. 1954 (MS. 15th c.) And fel on knees down of his hors And badde Mercy, for Goddes corps.
1377 W. Langland Piers Plowman B. xv. 23 Þe whiles I quykke þe corps..called am I anima.
c1386 G. Chaucer Sir Thopas 197 (Harl.) God schilde his corps [so 3 MSS. of 6-texts, 3 cors] fro schonde.
c1460 (?c1400) Tale of Beryn l. 3246 As myne owne corps [rhyme hors] I woll cherrish hym.
a1513 R. Fabyan New Cronycles Eng. & Fraunce (1516) I. clxxx. f. ciiiiv Foure knyghtes whiche were called Gardeyns of her corps.
a1513 W. Dunbar Poems (1998) I. 165 This awfull beist..wes..Rycht strong of corpis.
1528 D. Lindsay Dreme 136 I thocht my corps with cauld suld tak no harme.
1579 E. Spenser Shepheardes Cal. Nov. 166 Her soule unbodied of the burdenous corpse [rhymes forse, remorse].
1607 T. Walkington Optick Glasse 38 Wee often see..a faire and beautifull corpes, but a foule vgly mind.
1667 J. Milton Paradise Lost x. 601 To stuff this Maw, this vast unhide-bound Corps . View more context for this quotation
1706 E. Ward Hudibras Redivivus I. vii. 3 I shov'd my bulky Corps along.
2. esp. The dead body of a person (or formerly any animal).
a. with epithet dead, lifeless, etc. (now felt to be pleonastic in ordinary speech).
ΚΠ
c1385 G. Chaucer Legend Good Women Cleopatra. 677 Forth she fette This dede corps [so 5 MSS., 3 cors] and in the shryne yt shette.
1490 W. Caxton tr. Eneydos iv. 19 Vpon a deed corps to take vengeaunce soo inutyle.
1542 N. Udall tr. Erasmus Apophthegmes f. 336 Filled up with dedde corpses.
1611 Bible (King James) Isa. xxxvii. 36 They were all dead corpses . View more context for this quotation
a1616 W. Shakespeare Henry VI, Pt. 2 (1623) iii. ii. 132 Enter his Chamber, view his breathlesse Corpes . View more context for this quotation
1788 V. Knox Winter Evenings II. vi. viii. 263 I would reanimate thy lifeless corps.
c1850 Arabian Nights (Rtldg.) 645 He is now a lifeless corpse.
b. simply. (The ordinary current sense.)
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > the body > dead body > [noun]
lichc893
dust?a1000
holdc1000
bonesOE
stiff onea1200
bodyc1225
carrion?c1225
licham?c1225
worms' food or ware?c1225
corsec1250
ashc1275
corpsec1315
carcass1340
murraina1382
relicsa1398
ghostc1400
wormes warec1400
corpusc1440
scadc1440
reliefc1449
martc1480
cadaverc1500
mortc1500
tramort?a1513
hearse1530
bulk1575
offal1581
trunk1594
cadaverie1600
relicts1607
remains1610
mummya1616
relic1636
cold meat1788
mortality1827
death bone1834
deader1853
stiff1859
c1315 Shoreham 88 At complyn hyt was y-bore To the beryynge, That noble corps of Jhesu Cryst.
c1386 G. Chaucer Squire's Tale 511 As in a toumbe is al the faire aboue And vnder is the corps [so 3 MSS., 2 cors, 2 cours].
1490 Caxton's Blanchardyn & Eglantine (1962) vii. 30 She fell doune dyuerse tymes vpon the corps.
1549 Bk. Common Prayer (STC 16267) Buriall f. xxiiii* The priest metyng the Corps at the Churche style.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Julius Caesar (1623) iii. ii. 159 Then make a Ring about the Corpes of Cæsar. View more context for this quotation
1732 T. Lediard tr. J. Terrasson Life Sethos II. ix. 327 He intreated them to bury the king's corpse.
1796 J. Morse Amer. Universal Geogr. (new ed.) II. 466 The burials of the Turks are decent. The corps is attended by the relations.
1839 C. Thirlwall Hist. Greece VIII. 73 The ditch..was now partly filled with arms and corpses.
c. plural corps = corpses. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis II. 201 That he might over Tiber go Upon the corps that dede were Of the Romains.
1598 W. Shakespeare Henry IV, Pt. 1 i. i. 43 A thousand of his people butchered, Vpon whose dead corpes there was such misuse..By those Welch-women done. View more context for this quotation
a1604 M. Hanmer Chron. Ireland 151 in J. Ware Two Hist. Ireland (1633) The entrance..was ful of heads, legs, and armes, dead corps.
a1627 T. Middleton Chast Mayd in Cheape-side (1630) ii. 21 The dead Corps of poore Calues and Sheepe.
1656 A. Cowley Davideis iii. 97 in Poems With thousand corps the ways around are strown.
1713 J. Addison Cato ii. i The corps of half her Senate Manure the fields of Thessaly.
1748 tr. P. Lozano True Relation Earthquake Lima ii. 163 To collect and convey the Corps which could be found.
d. plural corps, said of a single body = ‘remains’.
ΚΠ
1613 W. Browne Britannia's Pastorals I. iv. 83 When as his corps are borne to be enshrin'd.
1631 J. Weever Anc. Funerall Monuments 475 Her corps were taken vp.
1632 J. Hayward tr. G. F. Biondi Eromena 31 The corpes of the Prince were..brought to the Palace.
1655 T. Fuller Church-hist. Brit. viii. 6 On the same day his Corps were buried at Westminster. [Still common in Sc. and north. dial.]
e. singular corp. Scottish and northern dialect.
ΚΠ
1488 (c1478) Hary Actis & Deidis Schir William Wallace (Adv.) (1968–9) x. l. 850 With worschip was the corp graithit in grawe.
1858 E. B. Ramsay Reminisc. Sc. Life (ed. 18) vi. 182 In Scotland the remains of the deceased person is called the ‘corp’.
1878 W. Dickinson Gloss. Words & Phrases Cumberland (ed. 2) Corp..(north) a corpse.
1893 N.E.D. at Corpse Sc. Proverb Blest is the corp that the rain rains on, Blest is the bride that the sun shines on.
f. A horse not intended to win in a race. slang.
ΚΠ
1863 Baily's Mag. Apr. 154 The circumstance of so many ‘corpses’ being led away after each race produced no sensation in the Ring.
1863 Baily's Mag. May 208 The horse did all that could be expected of him, and was never the ‘corpse’ his opponents expected to have found him.
3. Alchemy. = body n. 16a. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > matter > alchemy > other alchemical substances or theories > [noun] > ancient metals
bodya1393
corpse1393
1393 J. Gower Confessio Amantis II. 85 But for to worche it sikerly Betwene the corps and the spirit, Er that the metall be parfit, In seven formes it is set Of all.
4.
a. = body n. 8, 12a, 12b: Collective whole or mass; the substance, main portion, bulk, or sum; body (of law, science, etc.) corps of law = corpus juris at corpus n. 5. Obsolete (before corpse became the usual spelling.)
ΘΚΠ
society > law > system of laws > [noun]
lawa1000
corps of lawc1380
pandect1553
jurisprudence1656
legislation1659
corpus juris1705
corps diplomatique1796
law-system1880
adversary system1912
society > leisure > the arts > literature > a written composition > a compilation > [noun] > collection relating to a subject
corpsec1380
symposium1946
the world > relative properties > wholeness > [noun] > a complex whole > an organized or collective whole
altogethereOE
body1340
corpse1533
universality1561
globe?1594
orb1603
ensemble1703
organism1768
organity1929
the world > relative properties > wholeness > incompleteness > part of whole > [noun] > a great part or proportion > the greater part, the majority
the more partOE
the best part ofOE
(the) more parta1350
(the) most parta1350
(the) most part alla1350
(the) most party1372
for (also be, in) the most part (also deal, party)a1387
the better part ofa1393
the mo?a1400
most forcea1400
substancea1413
corsec1420
generalty?c1430
the greater partc1430
three quartersc1470
generalityc1485
the most feck1488
corpse1533
most1553
nine-tenths?1556
better half1566
generality?1570
pluralityc1570
body1574
the great body (of)1588
flush1592
three fourths1600
best1601
heap1609
gross1625
lump1709
bulk1711
majority1714
nineteen in twenty1730
balance1747
sweighta1800
heft1816
chief1841
the force1842
thick end1847
c1380 J. Wyclif Sel. Wks. III. 504 I suppose..þat þo gospel of Crist be hert of þo corps of Gods lawe.
1533 T. More Apol. iv, in Wks. 849/2 Though the corps and bodye of the scripture be not translated vnto them in theyr mother tongue.
1548 N. Udall et al. tr. Erasmus Paraphr. Newe Test. I. Luke v. f. 69v The summe and the corpse of all sinnes together in generall.
1586 Praise of Musicke ii. 32 Some ἐγκυκλοπαιδεία the whole corpse and body of sciences.
a1626 F. Bacon Elements Common Lawes (1630) Ep. Ded. sig. A2 v One competent and uniforme corps of law.
a1642 R. Callis Reading of Statute of Sewers (1647) i. 6 There is better concord betwixt the Title and Body of my Statute, for the corps of the Act perform as much as the Title promised.
1651 N. Bacon Contin. Hist. Disc. Govt. 208 The corps of [t]his Act is to secure the Kings Title.
b. A body of persons. Sometimes figurative from 1, ‘body’ as opposed to ‘members’. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > social relations > association, fellowship, or companionship > a company or body of persons > [noun]
ferec975
flockOE
gingc1175
rout?c1225
companyc1300
fellowshipc1300
covinc1330
eschelec1330
tripc1330
fellowred1340
choira1382
head1381
glub1382
partya1387
peoplec1390
conventc1426
an abominable of monksa1450
body1453
carol1483
band1490
compernagea1500
consorce1512
congregationa1530
corporationa1535
corpse1534
chore1572
society1572
crew1578
string1579
consort1584
troop1584
tribe1609
squadron1617
bunch1622
core1622
lag1624
studa1625
brigadea1649
platoon1711
cohort1719
lot1725
corps1754
loo1764
squad1786
brotherhood1820
companionhood1825
troupe1825
crowd1840
companionship1842
group1845
that ilk1845
set-out1854
layout1869
confraternity1872
show1901
crush1904
we1927
familia1933
shower1936
1534 Sir T. More Let. in J. Strype Eccl. Memorials (1721) I. App. xlviii. 134 Sith al Christendom is one corps.
a1641 R. Montagu Acts & Monuments (1642) 93 Concurring..to make up a Corps or Society.
1651 C. Cartwright Certamen Religiosum i. 62 The whole corps of Christendome.
c. corps politic n. = body politic n. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
society > authority > rule or government > a or the state > [noun]
commona1382
commontya1382
policya1393
communitya1398
commonweal?a1400
politic1429
commonwealth1445
well public1447
public thinga1450
public weala1470
body politica1475
weal-public1495
statea1500
politic bodyc1537
body1545
public state1546
civil-wealth1547
republic?1549
state1553
polity1555
publica1586
estate1605
corps politic1696
negara1955
negeri1958
1696 E. Phillips New World of Words (new ed.) Corps Politick, or Bodies Politick, are Bishops, Deans, Parsons of Churches and such-like, who have Succession in one Person only.
1721 in N. Bailey Universal Etymol. Eng. Dict.
5. (corps, rarely corpse). The endowment of an office:
a. of a sheriffdom or other civil office.
ΚΠ
1542–3 Act 34 & 35 Hen. VIII c. 16 §1 Shireffes..stande..chargeable towarde his highnes..with diuers auncient formes annexed vnto the corps of the same counties.
b. of a prebend or other ecclesiastical office. (medieval Latin corpus prebendæ.)
ΘΚΠ
society > law > transfer of property > settlement of property > [noun] > endowment > the endowment of a civil or church office
corpse1580
1580 in W. H. Longstaffe & J. Booth Halmota Prioratus Dunelmensis (1889) 195 Manr de Rellye..being the Corps of the ix prebende, per annum, 7 li.
1580 in W. H. Longstaffe & J. Booth Halmota Prioratus Dunelmensis (1889) 200 Mannr de Holme, being parcell of the Deane his corps, per annum, 12 li.
1597 R. Hooker Of Lawes Eccl. Politie v. lxxx. 255 Where the corps of the profite or benefice is but one the tytle can be but one mans.
1624 R. Montagu Immediate Addresse 48 A Deanerie of good Corps and value.
a1632 L. Hutten Diss. Antiq. Oxf. in C. Plummer Elizabethan Oxf. (1887) 83 The Parsonage thereof [Ifley] is the peculiar Corps of the Archdeaconry of Oxford.
1723 E. Ashmole Hist. & Antiq. Berks. I. 47 Part of this Parish is the Corpse of a Prebendal Stall in the Cathedral Church of Lincoln.
1766 J. Entick Surv. London in New Hist. London IV. 214 The prebends..are Bromesbury..whose Corps lies in the parish of Willesden, etc.
1868 E. A. Freeman Hist. Norman Conquest (1877) II. viii. 273 Other portions of the estates..became the corpses of various prebends.

Compounds

C1. General attributive.
a.
corpse-bearer n.
ΚΠ
1863 J. Ruskin Munera Pulveris (1880) 136 The massy shoulders of those corpse-bearers [the waves of the sea].
corpse-body n.
ΚΠ
1930 D. H. Lawrence Nettles 24 Trot, trot, trot, corpse-body, to work. Chew, chew, chew, corpse-body, at the meal.
corpse-chesting n. (Sc.)
ΚΠ
1827 J. Hogg in Blackwood's Mag. 21 71 Were you present at the corpse-chesting?
corpse-city n.
ΚΠ
1946 S. Spender European Witness 22 This putrescent corpse-city was the hub of the Rhineland.
corpse-climate n.
ΚΠ
1867 G. Meredith Vittoria I. vii. 88 Then down, and along a passage; lower down, deep into corpse-climate.
corpse-hood n.
ΚΠ
1819 W. Scott Ivanhoe III. xii. 312 To prevent my being recognised I drew the corpse-hood over my face.
corpse-sheet n.
ΚΠ
1818 W. Scott Heart of Mid-Lothian v, in Tales of my Landlord 2nd Ser. II. 116 Her throat's sair misguggled and mashackered..she wears her corpse-sheet drawn weel up to hide it.
corpse-stealer n.
ΚΠ
1864 W. Bagehot Coll. Wks. (1965) II. 303 Sterne's grave..was so..neglected that the corpse-stealers ventured to open it.
corpse-worm n.
ΚΠ
1940 W. Empson Gathering Storm 21 Your eyes are corpse-worms.
b.
corpse-cold adj.
ΚΠ
1903 T. Hardy Dynasts I. i. iii. 22 One task Is theirs who would inter this corpse-cold Act.
corpse-defiling adj.
ΚΠ
1939 R. Campbell Flowering Rifle ii. 46 Corpse-defiling anarchists.
corpse-encumbered adj.
ΚΠ
1878 A. C. Swinburne White Czar in Poems & Ballads 191 Till the wind gave his warriors and their might To shipwreck and the corpse-encumbered sea.
corpse-fed adj.
ΚΠ
1890 R. Kipling Barrack-room Ballads (1892) 140 The cod and the corpse-fed conger-eel.
corpse-like adj.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > the body > dead body > [adjective]
ghastly1574
cadaverous1643
corpse-like1830
cadaveric1835
corpsy1883
1830 Ld. Tennyson Poems 32 All cold, and dead, and corpselike grown.
1862 E. Bulwer-Lytton Strange Story I. xl. 349 There it was before me, corpse-like, yet not dead.
corpse-pale adj.
ΚΠ
1929 D. H. Lawrence Pansies 32 You are all going dead and corpse-pale.
corpse-strewn adj.
ΚΠ
1905 Westm. Gaz. 6 June 1/3 After an impressive pause he rose from the corpse-strewn stage.
C2. Also corpse-candle n.
corpse-cooler n. U.S. (see quot.).
ΚΠ
1874 E. H. Knight Pract. Dict. Mech. Corpse-cooler, a temporary coffin or shell in which a corpse is laid to delay the natural decay by exposure to an artificially cooled atmosphere.
corpse-factory n. slang a place where many people are slaughtered; also figurative.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > death > killing > slaughter > [noun] > scene of
butchery?1552
slaughterhouse1578
shamble1593
Aceldama1607
corpse-factory1919
killing ground1946
killing field1980
1919 W. H. Downing Digger Dial. 18 Corpse factory, the Western Front.
1937 W. B. Yeats Let. 27 Jan. (1954) 879 I think professional musicians have a corpse-factory, mankind melted down and poured out of a bottle.
corpse-fetch n. [fetch n.2]
ΚΠ
1914 J. Masefield Philip the King 17 You corpse-fetch from the unclean grave, begone!
corpse-gate n. (dialect also corpse-yat, corpse-yett, etc.) = lych-gate n.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > artefacts > division of building (general) > other parts > [noun] > lich-gate
lych-gate1482
corpse-gate1855
1855 F. K. Robinson Gloss. Yorks. Words 36 Corpse Yat, the Leich gate or Corpse gate of the archæologist.
1864 Chambers's Encycl. (at cited word) A corpse-gate is very common in many parts of England.
corpse-light n. = corpse-candle n. 2.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the supernatural > supernatural being > ghost or phantom > [noun] > light appearing over corpse > light as omen of death
fetch-light1692
corpse-candle1694
corpse-light1801
death candle1808
fetch-candle1852
1801 W. Scott Glenfinlas in M. G. Lewis Tales of Wonder I. 129 The corpse-lights dance—they're gone.
1823 Ld. Byron Island iv. iv. 63 He..vanished like a corpse-light from a grave.
corpse-man n. transl. Latin ustor, one who burns corpses.
ΚΠ
1871 R. Ellis tr. Catullus Poems lix. 5 Some half-shorn corpseman.
corpse-plant n. a name given in U.S. to Monotropa uniflora on account of its fleshy-white colour.
Categories »
corpse-preserver n. U.S. = corpse-cooler n.
Categories »
corpse-provider n. slang a doctor.
corpse-quake n. (see quot.).
ΚΠ
1889 Boston (Mass.) Jrnl. 15 Feb. 2/4 A New York grave digger says that persons of his calling are subject to what is called ‘corpse quake’. It attacks a digger while he is about the cemetery, the victim shaking as though suffering from a chill.
corpse reviver n. U.S. slang a kind of ‘mixed’ drink; now esp. a pick-me-up for a hangover.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > drink > intoxicating liquor > types or qualities of intoxicating liquor > [noun] > fortifying or reviving
hair of the dog that bit you1546
eye-opener1818
bracer1829
livener1870
corpse reviver1871
reviver1876
screw1877
fearnought1880
pickup1881
stiffener1928
warmer-upper1960
1871 Birmingham Daily Post 22 Dec. And our American refreshment bars, In drinks of all descriptions cut a dash, From corpse revivers down to ‘brandy smash’.
1937 M. Allingham Case of Late Pig xvii. 125 Pig was dressed, but he wanted a corpse-reviver.
1966 ‘A. Blaisdell’ Date with Death xi. 144 Corpse Reviver Number Three... You take a jigger of Pernod and add some lemon juice and ice cubes and fill the glass with champagne.
corpse-watch n. (see quot.).
ΚΠ
1806 J. Lingard Antiq. Anglo-Saxon Church II. viii. 75 The custom of watching over the dead..in the north of England, is called lakewake, from the Saxon, liceþæcce, or corpse-watch.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1893; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

corpsev.

Brit. /kɔːps/, U.S. /kɔrps/
Etymology: < corpse n.
slang.
1. transitive. To make a corpse of, to kill.
ΘΚΠ
the world > life > death > killing > kill [verb (transitive)]
swevec725
quelmeOE
slayc893
quelleOE
of-falleOE
ofslayeOE
aquellc950
ayeteeOE
spillc950
beliveOE
to bring (also do) of (one's) life-dayOE
fordoa1000
forfarea1000
asweveOE
drepeOE
forleseOE
martyrOE
to do (also i-do, draw) of lifeOE
bringc1175
off-quellc1175
quenchc1175
forswelta1225
adeadc1225
to bring of daysc1225
to do to deathc1225
to draw (a person) to deathc1225
murder?c1225
aslayc1275
forferec1275
to lay to ground, to earth (Sc. at eird)c1275
martyrc1300
strangle1303
destroya1325
misdoa1325
killc1330
tailc1330
to take the life of (also fro)c1330
enda1340
to kill to (into, unto) death1362
brittena1375
deadc1374
to ding to deathc1380
mortifya1382
perisha1387
to dight to death1393
colea1400
fella1400
kill out (away, down, up)a1400
to slay up or downa1400
swelta1400
voida1400
deliverc1400
starvec1425
jugylc1440
morta1450
to bring to, on, or upon (one's) bierc1480
to put offc1485
to-slaya1500
to make away with1502
to put (a person or thing) to silencec1503
rida1513
to put downa1525
to hang out of the way1528
dispatch?1529
strikea1535
occidea1538
to firk to death, (out) of lifec1540
to fling to deathc1540
extinct1548
to make out of the way1551
to fet offa1556
to cut offc1565
to make away?1566
occise1575
spoil1578
senda1586
to put away1588
exanimate1593
unmortalize1593
speed1594
unlive1594
execute1597
dislive1598
extinguish1598
to lay along1599
to make hence1605
conclude1606
kill off1607
disanimate1609
feeze1609
to smite, stab in, under the fifth rib1611
to kill dead1615
transporta1616
spatch1616
to take off1619
mactate1623
to make meat of1632
to turn up1642
inanimate1647
pop1649
enecate1657
cadaverate1658
expedite1678
to make dog's meat of1679
to make mincemeat of1709
sluice1749
finisha1753
royna1770
still1778
do1780
deaden1807
deathifyc1810
to lay out1829
cool1833
to use up1833
puckeroo1840
to rub out1840
cadaverize1841
to put under the sod1847
suicide1852
outkill1860
to fix1875
to put under1879
corpse1884
stiffen1888
tip1891
to do away with1899
to take out1900
stretch1902
red-light1906
huff1919
to knock rotten1919
skittle1919
liquidate1924
clip1927
to set over1931
creasea1935
ice1941
lose1942
to put to sleep1942
zap1942
hit1955
to take down1967
wax1968
trash1973
ace1975
1884 Good Words June 400/1 [His] attempt to ‘corpse’ a policeman.
1884 Notes & Queries 6th Ser. IX. 120/2 To corpse. This is one of many customary and coarse ways of menacing the infliction of death. It is horribly familiar in London.
2. Actors' slang. To confuse or ‘put out’ (an actor) in the performance of his part; to spoil (a scene or piece of acting) by some blunder.
ΚΠ
1859 J. C. Hotten Dict. Slang 24 Corpse, to confuse or put out the actors by making a mistake.
1886 Cornhill Mag. Oct. 436 (Farmer) He [an actor] expressed a hope that Miss Tudor ‘wouldn't corpse his business’ over the forge-door again that evening.

Draft additions 1993

b. intransitive. Of an actor: to forget one's lines; = dry v. 2d; to spoil one's performance by being confused or made to laugh by one's colleagues.
ΘΚΠ
society > leisure > the arts > performance arts > drama > acting > act [verb (intransitive)] > in specific manner
to tear a (the) cat1600
to top one's part1672
to walk through ——1824
corpse1874
sketch1888
underplay1896
to play for laughs (also a laugh)1900
register1913
scene-steal1976
1874 Hotten's Slang Dict. (rev. ed.) 129 Corpse, to stick fast in the dialogue.
1958 News Chron. 23 May 4/7 There's a new word, too, from drama school. When anyone forgot their lines in the past they had dried. Today, they have ‘corpsed’.
1972 A. Bennett Getting On i. 32 Mrs Brodribb: When Max—. Geoff: Max (He corpses). Mrs Brodribb: (silencing him with a look)—pauses by your doorstep he is not just relieving himself. He is leaving a message.
1987 Observer 8 Feb. 11/2 Gambon said his dying line (‘Oh, I am slain’) in the mode of a different theatrical grandee every night..—a display of ‘suicidal nerve’, all to get his co-actor to corpse in the dark.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1893; most recently modified version published online March 2022).
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