CORSELET. The old name for a piece of armour used to cover the body of a fighting-man.
CORTEGE. The official staff, civil or military.
CORUSCATIONS. Atmospheric flashes of light, as in auroras.
CORVETTES. Flush-decked ships, equipped with one tier of guns: fine vessels for warm climates, from admitting a free circulation of air. The Bermuda-built corvettes were deemed superior vessels, swift, weatherly, "lie to" well, and carry sail in a stiff breeze. The cedar of which they are chiefly built is very buoyant, but also brittle.
CORVORANT. An old mode of spelling cormorant.
COSIER. A lubber, a botcher, a tailoring fellow [coser, Sp. to sew?]
COSMICAL RISING AND SETTING of the Heavenly Bodies. Their rising and setting with the sun.
COSMOGRAPHER. Formerly applied to "too clever by half." Now, one who describes the world or universe in all its parts.
COSS. A measure of distance in India, varying in different districts from one mile and a half to two miles.
COSTAL. Relating to the coast.