Source : Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Coral \Cor"al\, n. [Of. coral, F, corail, L. corallum, coralium,
fr. Gr. kora`llion.]
1. (Zo["o]l.) The hard parts or skeleton of various Anthozoa,
and of a few Hydrozoa. Similar structures are also formed
by some Bryozoa.
Note: The large stony corals forming coral reefs belong to
various genera of {Madreporaria}, and to the hydroid
genus, {Millepora}. The red coral, used in jewelry, is
the stony axis of the stem of a gorgonian ({Corallium
rubrum}) found chiefly in the Mediterranean. The {fan
corals}, {plume corals}, and {sea feathers} are species
of {Gorgoniacea}, in which the axis is horny.
Organ-pipe coral is formed by the genus {Tubipora}, an
Alcyonarian, and {black coral} is in part the axis of
species of the genus {Antipathes}. See {Anthozoa},
{Madrepora}.
2. The ovaries of a cooked lobster; -- so called from their
color.
3. A piece of coral, usually fitted with small bells and
other appurtenances, used by children as a plaything.
{Brain coral}, or {Brain stone coral}. See under {Brain}.
{Chain coral}. See under {Chain}.
{Coral animal} (Zo["o]l.), one of the polyps by which corals
are formed. They are often very erroneously called {coral
insects}.
{Coral fish}. See in the Vocabulary.
{Coral reefs} (Phys. Geog.), reefs, often of great extent,
made up chiefly of fragments of corals, coral sands, and
the solid limestone resulting from their consolidation.
They are classed as {fringing reefs}, when they border the
land; {barrier reefs}, when separated from the shore by a
broad belt of water; {atolls}, when they constitute
separate islands, usually inclosing a lagoon. See {Atoll}.
{Coral root} (Bot.), a genus ({Corallorhiza}) of orchideous
plants, of a yellowish or brownish red color, parasitic on
roots of other plants, and having curious jointed or
knotted roots not unlike some kinds of coral. See Illust.
under {Coralloid}.
{Coral snake}. (Zo)
(a) A small, venomous, Brazilian snake {(Elaps
corallinus)}, coral-red, with black bands.
(b) A small, harmless, South American snake ({Tortrix
scytale}).
{Coral tree} (Bot.), a tropical, leguminous plant, of several
species, with showy, scarlet blossoms and coral-red seeds.
The best known is {Erythrina Corallodendron}.
{Coral wood}, a hard, red cabinet wood. --McElrath.
Source : WordNet®
coral
n 1: a variable color averaging a deep pink
2: the hard stony skeleton of a Mediterranean coral that has a
delicate red or pink color and is used for jewelry [syn: {red
coral}, {precious coral}]
3: unfertilized lobster roe; reddens in cooking; used as
garnish or to color sauces
4: marine colonial polyp characterized by a calcareous
skeleton; masses in a variety of shapes often forming
reefs
coral
adj : of a strong pink to yellowish-pink color
Source : Free On-Line Dictionary of Computing
CORAL
1. {Class Oriented Ring Associated Language}.
2. A {deductive database} and {logic programming} system based
on {Horn-clause} rules with extensions like {SQL}'s {group-by}
and {aggregation} operators. CORAL was developed at the
University of Wisconsin-Madison. It is implemented in C++ and
has a {Prolog}-like {syntax}.
Many evaluation techniques are supported, including {bottom-up
fixpoint evaluation} and top-down {backtracking}. {Modules}
are separately compiled; different evaluation methods can be
used in different modules within a single program.
Disk-resident data is supported via an interface to the
{Exodus} storage manager. There is an on-line help facility.
It requires {AT&T} {C++} 2.0 (or {G++} soon) and runs on
{Decstation} and {Sun-4}.
{(ftp://ftp.cs.wisc.edu/)}.
(1993-01-29)