"
my etymology.com

Etymology of the English word corpocracy

the English word corpocracy
derived from the English word corporate
derived from the Latin word corporatus (corporate-, corporation-, of a corporation; endowed with a tangible body; formed into a corporate society; member of a corporate society, corporation)
derived from the Latin word corporare (kill, strike dead; form into a body)
derived from the Classical Latin word corpus (body; person, self; substantial, material, concrete object)
derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *kʷrep-
derived from the English word bureaucracy
derived from the French word bureaucratie
derived from the French word bureau
derived from the Old French word burel
derived from the Latin word bura (plow beam, curved hinder part of plow)
derived from the Latin word burra (small cow with a red mouth, muzzle; shaggy garment)
using the French suffix -cratie
derived from the Greek word kratos, κράτος (vigor ('great'))
derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *kar-

Usage

Word found in Modern English



© 2008 myetymology.com - the etymology of all words
Dapyx Software: MP3 Explorer | Ebook Manager | Zenithic