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Discover LudwigThe phrase "as corpse" is not correct and does not convey a clear meaning in written English.
It may be intended to describe a state of being lifeless or inactive, but it lacks proper context and grammatical structure.
Example: "He lay there, as corpse, unable to move or respond."
Alternatives: "like a corpse" or "as if dead".
Exact(12)
"I'm going as Corpse Bride," one said.
Drug traffickers frequently employ a tactic known as corpse messaging.
His wife, as Corpse No. 686, was the 28th body of the day.
They're also known as "corpse flowers" because they give off an overwhelming odor of rotting flesh to attract pollinating insects.
Footpaths are now our leisure lifelines, but most have more functional origins, including many that started as corpse roads.
People come up on the street, and they have a "Nightmare" tattoo, or little girls saying they love "Sweeney Todd," and you're like, "How were you able to see it?" Or you see people, especially around Halloween, dressed up in costume, as Corpse Bride or the Mad Hatter or Sally.
Similar(48)
Frankly, the picture is every bit as violent, gruesome, and as corpse-ridden as the action dramas I mapped out when I was ten-years old, which makes me shocked that it got a PG-13.
"We will go to the ball as corpses," he announces.
"To make up extras as corpses is obscene.
(The practice is also known as corpsing, especially in Britain).
Jews were more desired as corpses by WWII Christians than as workers.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com