[
UK
/kˈɔːpɔːɹˌiəl/
]
ADJECTIVE
-
having material or physical form or substance
that which is created is of necessity corporeal and visible and tangible -
affecting or characteristic of the body as opposed to the mind or spirit
corporeal suffering
a corporal defect
a somatic symptom or somatic illness
bodily needs
How To Use corporeal In A Sentence
- It is critical to an understanding of deixis to recall that even very ‘local’ elements of context, such as a speaker's own corporeal experience and perceptual field, are susceptible of schematisation.
- Why then do we long to embrace incorporeality and flee our embodied natures?
- Causes of hemoptysis in children with congenital cardiopathies, whether they undergo surgery or not, are many: extracorporeal circulation, pulmonary infections, coagulopathies, vascular disorders.
- It took its corporeal form in the living room, disguised as a humanoid figure made of what could be described as a giant cotton ball.
- Once again, he was incorporeal, a mere awareness floating in space. THE GREENSTONE GRAIL: THE SANGREAL TRILOGY ONE
- The common sense stands midway between the corporeal sense of sight and the imagination, which is in the anterior chamber of the brain, and is known as phantasy (Aristotelian φαντασία). A History of Mediaeval Jewish Philosophy
- Here the devouring jaw is a symbol of corporeal disintegration; it reverses the process of reintegrating the perfected body and soul at the time of the Resurrection.
- But in the common variety, they're ordinary people who believe it's their calling to help people worship a particular incorporeal deity instead of rocks.
- TPE also referred to as plasmapheresis is an extracorporeal blood purification technique to remove part of a patient's blood called plasma, while replacing it with another substance such as fresh frozen plasma or a solution containing albumin. NxStage® Receives FDA Clearance for Therapeutic Plasma Exchange (TPE) Cartridge - Yahoo! Finance
- While she pines on her sick bed, her soul rises from her body, takes corporeal form and pursues the departing student.