| Term | Definition |
| corp[or] | (body) |
| cred | (to believe, to trust) |
| cur[r], curs, course | (to run, to flow) |
| dic[t] | (to speak, to say) |
| ex | (out, of, away from) |
| benediction | the invocation of a divine blessing, as at the close of a religious service; a blessing or state of blessedness |
| concourse | a running or flowing together; a broad public walkway or a hallway; a crowd or throng |
| concurrent | occurring at the same time; meeting or acting together |
| corporal | related to the physical body |
| corpulent | very stout; fleshy and obese; fat |
| credibility | the quality of being believable or trustworthy |
| credulity | the (naive) willingness to believe too easily without proof |
| cursory | done in a superficial or hasty manner |
| dictum | an authoritative saying or maxim |
| incorporate | to form into one body or functioning unit; to combine several different things into a whole |
| incredulous | not believing, skeptical, or doubting |
| indicative | characteristic of or being very much like; suggestive |