noun 1.the physical structure and material substance of an animal or plant, living or dead.
3.the trunk or main mass of a thing: the body of a tree.
4.Anatomy, Zoology. the physical structure of a human being or animal, not including the head, limbs, and tail; trunk; torso.
5.Architecture. the principal mass of a building.
EXPAND6.the section of a vehicle, usually in the shape of a box, cylindrical container, or platform, in or on
which passengers or the load is carried.
7.Nautical. the hull of a ship.
8.Aeronautics. the fuselage of a plane.
9.Printing. the shank of a type, supporting the face.
10.Geometry. a figure having the three dimensions of length, breadth, and thickness; a solid.
11.Physics. a mass, especially one considered as a whole.
12.the major portion of an army, population, etc.: The body of the American people favors the president's policy.
13.the principal part of a speech or document, minus introduction, conclusion, indexes, etc.
14.a person: She's a quiet sort of body.
15.Law. the physical person of an individual.
16.a collective group: student body; corporate body.
17.Astronomy. an
object in space, as a planet or star.
18.a separate physical mass or quantity, especially as distinguished from other masses or quantities.
19.consistency or density; richness; substance: This wine has good body. Wool has more body than rayon.
20.the part of a dress that covers the trunk or the part of the trunk above the waist.
21.Ceramics. the basic material of which a ceramic article is made.
COLLAPSE
verb (used with object) 22.to invest with or as with a body.
23.to represent in
bodily form (usually followed by
forth).
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In a body
is always a great word to know.
So is lollapalooza. Does it mean:
So is ort. Does it mean:
So is doohickey. Does it mean:
adjective 24.of or pertaining to the body;
bodily. 25.of or pertaining to the main reading matter of a book, article, etc., as opposed to headings, illustrations, or the like.
Idioms26.in a body, as a group; together; collectively: We left the party in a body.
27.keep body and soul together, to support oneself; maintain life: Few writers can make enough to keep body and soul together without another occupation.
Origin:
before 900; Middle English; Old English bodig; akin to Old High German botah
Synonyms
1, 2. Body, carcass, corpse, cadaver agree in referring to a physical organism, usually human or animal. Body refers to the material organism of an individual, human or animal, either living or dead: the muscles in a horse's body; the body of a victim (human or animal). Carcass refers only to the dead body of an animal, unless applied humorously or contemptuously to the human body: a sheep's carcass; Save your carcass. Corpse refers only to the dead body of a human being: preparing a corpse for burial. Cadaver refers to a dead body, usually a corpse, particularly one used for scientific study: dissection of cadavers in anatomy classes. 3. substance, bulk. 12. mass, group, throng, multitude; bulk, preponderance, majority.
Antonyms
12. handful, scattering, few.