A corpus is a collection of texts on a computer - basically a database of language. Every word in a corpus is tagged by its formal category (e.g. singular common noun, modal auxiliary verb) so that linguists can distinguish usage patterns and analyse the results.
There are a couple of corpora available freely online: The British National Corpus (http://www.natcorp.ox.ac.uk/) and the Corpus of American English (http://www.americancorpus.org/).
Some of the branches include Critical Discourse Analysis, Social, Religious, Scientific, Feminism, Corpus, Racism and Media Discourse Analysis.
In teaching, a corpus refers to a collection of written or spoken texts that are used for linguistic analysis and language learning purposes. By studying a corpus, teachers and students can gain insights into language patterns, usage, and structures, helping to enhance language proficiency and understanding.
Corpus callosum connects the two halves of the brain.
The corpus callosum
Karin Aijmer has written: 'English Corpus Linguistics: Studies in Honor' 'Conversational routines in English' -- subject(s): English language, Prosodic analysis, Conversation, Discourse analysis, Semiotics, Spoken English, Computational linguistics
The singular form of "corpus" is "corpus" and the plural form is "corpora."
The longitudinal fissure separates the two hemispheres and the corpus callosum connects them.
Corpus Christi is in Texas
Brian Corpus's birth name is Brian Keala Corpus.
Corpus callosum
Corpus callosum.
The meaning of Corpus is "Body."