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Corporal vs Visceral - What's the difference?

corporal | visceral |

As adjectives the difference between corporal and visceral

is that corporal is having a physical, tangible body; corporeal while visceral is of or relating to the viscera—internal organs of the body; splanchnic.

As a noun corporal

is a non-commissioned officer army rank with NATO code OR-4. The rank below a sergeant but above a lance corporal and private.

corporal

English

Etymology 1

From (etyl) corporal (French corporel), from (etyl) ; compare corporeal.

Adjective

(-)
  • (archaic) Having a physical, tangible body; corporeal.
  • * 1603-06 , Macbeth: Ac.1 Sc3, Wm. Shakespeare.
  • Into the air; and what seem'd corporal melted as breath into the wind.
  • Of or pertaining to the body, especially the human body.
  • Synonyms
    * bodily * corporeal
    Derived terms
    * corporality * corporal punishment

    Etymology 2

    Corrupted from the (etyl) caporal, from the (etyl) caporale, from .

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • (military) A non-commissioned officer army rank with NATO code . The rank below a sergeant but above a lance corporal and private.
  • A non-commissioned officer rank in the police force, below a sergeant but above a private or patrolman.
  • Derived terms
    * corporal's guard * lance corporal * ship's corporal

    Etymology 3

    From the (etyl) corporale, the neuter of corporalis representing the doctrine of transubstantiation in which the Eucharist becomes the body of Christ.

    Noun

    (en noun)
  • (ecclesiastical) The white linen cloth on which the elements of the Eucharist are placed; a communion cloth.
  • *
  • Derived terms
    * corporal oath

    visceral

    English

    Adjective

    (en adjective)
  • (anatomy) Of or relating to the viscera—internal organs of the body; splanchnic.
  • * 1875 , , Insectivorous Plants , ch. 6:
  • Some areolar tissue free from elastic tissue was next procured from the visceral cavity of a toad.
  • * 1914 , , The Dream Doctor , ch. 22 The X-Ray "Movies":
  • "I can focus the X-rays first on the screen by means of a special quartz objective which I have devised. Then I take the pictures. Here, you see, are the lungs in slow or rapid respiration. There is the rhythmically beating heart, distinctly pulsating in perfect outline. There is the liver, moving up and down with the diaphragm, the intestines, and the stomach. You can see the bones moving with the limbs, as well as the inner visceral life."
  • Having to do with the response of the body as opposed to the intellect, as in the distinction between feeling and thinking.
  • * 1630 , , "Death's Duel":
  • Our meditation of his death should be more visceral , and affect us more, because it is of a thing already done.
  • * 1915 , , The Research Magnificent , Prelude – On Fear and Aristocracy:
  • [T]he discretion of an aristocrat is in his head, a tactical detail, it has nothing to do with this visceral sinking, this ebb in the nerves.
  • * 1964 July 3, " Books: Understanding Media'' by Marshall McLuhan," ''Time :
  • Television and other "electric media" are oral-auditory, tactile, visceral , and involve the individual almost without volition.
  • * 2011 Feb. 17, Ann Hulbert, " Book Review: Joyce Carol Oates’s Widow’s Lament''," ''New York Times (retrieved 10 Aug. 2011):
  • At its visceral core, grief is a stress response.
  • (figurative, obsolete) Having deep sensibility.
  • * Bishop Reynolds
  • Love is of all other the inmost and most visceral affection; and therefore called, by the apostle, 'bowels of love.'

    Synonyms

    * splanchnic

    Antonyms

    * cerebral

    Derived terms

    * visceral pleura

    See also

    * gut feeling * gut reaction

    Anagrams

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