I Sing the Body Electric is a famous poem by Walt Whitman, one of the twelve poems which comprised the first edition of Leaves of Grass (1856/67). In it, he celebrates the glories of existence, explores themes of the body, its parts and its whole, the interconnectedness of body and soul, the sensuality of the body, and equality and interconnectedness of us all (including between races.) The ...
In the 19th century “dog’s body” was sailor slang for a common shipboard meal composed primarily of boiled peas, with powdered ships-biscuit or flour added as a thickener. I suspect that body here represents a euphemism for something even less savory. Around WW I the term came to be applied to junior officers: —Montague Thomas Hainsselin, The Curtain of Steel, 1991. As these were ...
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In cases like this, it's worth considering what happens with a noun that has a different (phonetic) form in the plural vs possessive: this man's immune system ?these men's immune system these men's immune systems So I would go for either: "our body's immune system" or "our bodies' immune systems". As discussed in another post, English has a tendency to prefer a "distributed plural" in cases ...