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View synonyms for body

body

[ bod-ee ]

noun

, plural bod·ies.
  1. the physical structure and material substance of an animal or plant, living or dead.
  2. a corpse; carcass.
  3. the trunk or main mass of a thing:

    the body of a tree.

    Synonyms: bulk, main

  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.
  6. 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.

    Synonyms: majority, preponderance, multitude, throng, group, mass

    Antonyms: few, scattering, handful

  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. Also called heav·en·ly bod·y [hev, -, uh, n-lee , bod, -ee]. 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.


verb (used with object)

, bod·ied, bod·y·ing.
  1. to invest with or as with a body.
  2. to represent in bodily form (usually followed by forth ).

adjective

  1. of or relating to the body; bodily.
  2. of or relating to the main reading matter of a book, article, etc., as opposed to headings, illustrations, or the like.

body

/ ˈbɒdɪ /

noun

    1. the entire physical structure of an animal or human being corporealphysical
    2. ( as modifier )

      body odour

  1. the flesh, as opposed to the spirit

    while we are still in the body

  2. the trunk or torso, not including the limbs, head, or tail
  3. a dead human or animal; corpse
  4. the largest or main part of anything

    the body of a plant

    the body of a vehicle

  5. a separate or distinct mass of water or land
  6. the main part; majority

    the body of public opinion

  7. the central part of a written work

    the body of a thesis as opposed to the footnotes

  8. a number of individuals regarded as a single entity; group

    they marched in a body

    the student body

  9. maths a three-dimensional region with an interior
  10. physics an object or substance that has three dimensions, a mass, and is distinguishable from surrounding objects
  11. fullness in the appearance of the hair
  12. the characteristic full quality of certain wines, determined by the density and the content of alcohol or tannin

    a Burgundy has a heavy body

  13. substance or firmness, esp of cloth
  14. the sound box of a guitar, violin, or similar stringed instrument
  15. a woman's close-fitting one-piece garment for the torso
  16. the part of a dress covering the body from the shoulders to the waist
  17. See shank
    another name for shank
    1. the pigment contained in or added to paint, dye, etc
    2. the opacity of a paint in covering a surface
    3. the apparent viscosity of a paint
  18. in watercolour painting
    1. a white filler mixed with pigments to make them opaque
    2. ( as modifier ) See also gouache

      body colour

  19. printing the measurement from top to bottom of a piece of type, usually ascender to descender
  20. See person
    an informal or dialect word for a person
  21. keep body and soul together
    keep body and soul together to manage to keep alive; survive
  22. modifier of or relating to the main reading matter of a book as distinct from headings, illustrations, appendices, etc

    the body text



verb

  1. usually foll by forth to give a body or shape to

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Word History and Origins

Origin of body1

First recorded before 900; Middle English; Old English bodig; akin to Old High German botah

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Word History and Origins

Origin of body1

Old English bodig ; related to Old Norse buthkr box, Old High German botah body

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Idioms and Phrases

Idioms
  1. in a body, as a group; together; collectively:

    We left the party in a body.

  2. keep body and soul together, to support oneself; maintain life:

    Few writers can make enough to keep body and soul together without another occupation.

More idioms and phrases containing body

  • keep body and soul together
  • over my dead body

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Synonym Study

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.

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Example Sentences

Jiménez also told the Blade the morgue did not properly store her sister’s body.

She feared that confinement was taking its toll on her body.

From Vox

However the strength of these independent bodies completely depends on who is put into these positions and ultimately the decisions for those lie within the office of the president.

In the human body, thousands of different players make the meaningful whole possible.

The potential advantage of a vaccine using an attenuated live strain is that the body will encounter—and be able to react to—the entire virus.

And not just sick in the body but in your mind, because you start obsessing.

In other words, the free speech exhibited by the folks at Charlie Hebdo was not virtuous—until there was a body count.

It jettisons jiggling ribbons of joy to every part of my body.

My body used for his hard pleasure; a stone god gripping me in his hands.

“I have to think her body type played a role,” said Rachel Greenblatt, a Lecturer in Jewish Studies at Harvard University.

The Duchess had also a tent for their sick men; so that we had a small town of our own here, and every body employed.

The sad end of the mission to King M'Bongo has been narrated in the body of this work.

The evening previous to his death he was walking about the farm, in the full possession of all his faculties of mind and body.

The generall mayne body of the planters are divided into Officers, Laborers, Farmors.

(c) Decomposition of exudates anywhere in the body, as in empyema, bronchiectasis, and large tuberculous cavities.

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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023

Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.

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