Word Unit:
coqu-, cocu-, coc- (Latin: to cook, to prepare food, to ripen, to digest, to turn over in the mind)
Closely related to the coct- family of words.
Word Unit:
cor-, cord-, cour- (Latin: heart)
A cross reference of another word group that is related to: "heart": cardio-.
Word Unit:
corac-, coraco- (Greek: crowlike; used in the specialized sense of "pertaining to, or connected to the coracoid, the bony process that forms part of the scapular arch [and is so named because its shape resembles that of a crow's beak"])
Word Unit:
core-, coro-, cor- + (Greek: pupil of the eye; kore, literally, "girl" to mean both "doll" and "pupil of the eye")
Related references to "eye" or "eye part" word families: blepharo-; corneo-; eye, eyes; irido-; lenti-, lens-; lenticulo-; ocelli-; oculo-; op-, -optic; ophthalmo-; phaco-; pupillo-; retino-; uveo-.
Word Unit:
cori- (Latin: skin; hide, leather; the hide stripped off)
Word Unit:
corne-, corneo- + (Latin: horny, hornlike; horny [tissue] pertaining to the cornea, the horny transparent anterior portion of the external covering of the eyes)
Related references to "eye" or "eye part" word families: blepharo-; core-; eye, eyes; irido-; lenti-, lens-; lenticulo-; ocelli-; oculo-; op-, -optic; ophthalmo-; phaco-; pupillo-; retino-; uveo-.
Word Unit:
coron-, coroll- (Latin: garland, wreath, crown; from a Greek source meaning, "anything curved; a wreath, a garland")
Word Unit:
cortic-, cortico-, cort-, cortex + (Latin: bark, rind; literally, that which is "stripped off"; used in its extended senses, chief among these being "pertaining to the outer layer of a bodily organ, especially the brain")
Word Unit:
cosmo-, cosm-, cosmico-, cosm, -cosmia, -cosmos, -cosmic, -cosmics, -cosmical, -cosmology, -cosms (Greek: kosmos to cosmos; "world, universe"; from its "perfect order and arrangement"; to order, to arrange, to adorn; well-ordered, regular, arranged; skilled in adornment, which came into English as cosmetic.)
Word Unit:
coulomb + (named for French chemist Charles-Augustin de Coulomb (1736-1806), who devised a method of measuring electrical quantity)