Correze
[kaw-rez] /kɔˈrɛz/
noun
1.
a department in central France. 2273 sq. mi. (5885 sq. km).
Capital: Tulle.
/French kɔrɛz/
noun
1.
a department of central France, in Limousin region. Capital: Tulle. Pop: 234 144 (2003 est). Area: 5888 sq km (2296 sq miles)
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- Corrida
[kaw-ree-duh; Spanish kawr-ree-th ah] /kɔˈri də; Spanish kɔrˈri ðɑ/ noun, plural corridas [kaw-ree-duh z; Spanish kawr-ree-th ahs] /kɔˈri dəz; Spanish kɔrˈri ðɑs/ (Show IPA) 1. a bullfight. /koˈrriða/ noun 1. the Spanish word for bullfight
- Corrido
[kaw-ree-doh; Spanish kawr-ree-th aw] /kɔˈri doʊ; Spanish kɔrˈri ðɔ/ noun, plural corridos [kaw-ree-dohz; Spanish kawr-ree-th aws] /kɔˈri doʊz; Spanish kɔrˈri ðɔs/ (Show IPA) 1. a Mexican ballad or folksong about struggle against oppression and injustice.
- Corridor
[kawr-i-der, -dawr, kor-] /ˈkɔr ɪ dər, -ˌdɔr, ˈkɒr-/ noun 1. a gallery or passage connecting parts of a building; hallway. 2. a passage into which several rooms or apartments open. 3. a passageway in a passenger ship or railroad car permitting access to separate cabins or compartments. 4. a narrow tract of land forming a […]
- Corridor of uncertainty
noun 1. (cricket) an area of a wicket just outside a batsman’s off stump, so located that the batsman will have difficulty in deciding whether or not to play a ball bowled into it 2. (soccer) an area of the pitch between the defenders and the goalkeeper, in which it is not clear who should […]
- Corridors of power
The offices of powerful leaders. For example, As clerk to a Supreme Court justice, Jim thought he’d get his foot inside the corridors of power. This term was first used by C.P. Snow in his novel Homecomings (1956) for the ministries of Britain’s Whitehall, with their top-ranking civil servants. Later it was broadened to any […]