Corps

Etymology
From corps:, from  corpus:.

Pronunciation

 * Singular


 * Plural

Noun

 * 1)  A battlefield formation composed of two or more divisions.
 * 2) An organized group of people united by a common purpose.
 * 3) * diplomatic corps
 * 4) * White House press corps

Thesaurus
Bund, KP, Rochdale cooperative, adjutant general corps, age group, air corps, alliance, armored corps, army, army corps, army group, army nurse corps, assemblage, association, axis, band, battalion, battery, battle group, bevy, bloc, body, brigade, bugle corps, bunch, cabal, cadre, cast, chemical corps, clique, coalition, cohort, college, column, combat command, combat team, combination, combine, common market, company, complement, confederacy, confederation, consumer cooperative, contingent, cooperative, cooperative society, corps of cadets, corps of signals, corps troops, coterie, council, covey, credit union, crew, crowd, customs union, dental corps, detachment, detail, division, drum corps, economic community, engineer corps, faction, federation, field army, field train, file, fleet, flying column, free trade area, gang, garrison, group, grouping, groupment, in-group, junta, kitchen police, league, legion, machine, maniple, marine corps, medical corps, military police corps, mob, movement, ordnance corps, organization, out-group, outfit, pack, partnership, party, peer group, phalanx, platoon, political machine, posse, quartermaster corps, rank, regiment, rifle corps, ring, salon, section, set, signal corps, society, squad, squadron, stable, string, tactical unit, tank corps, task force, team, train, transportation corps, tribe, troop, troupe, union, unit, veterinary corps, wing

Translations

 * Cantonese: 軍團
 * Chinese: 軍團
 * Finnish:


 * Hungarian: hadtest
 * Mandarin: 軍團
 * Russian:


 * Estonian:
 * Finnish:
 * Hungarian:


 * Russian:
 * Swedish: kår

Anagrams

 * crops
 * sproc

Etymology
and cors: >  corpus:. The p: was added back to reflect the Latin etymology.

Noun

 * 1)  body
 * 2)  field (in abstract algebra)

Anagrams

 * porcs