incorporeus
From LSJ
και ἅμα ἐλευθέραν καὶ εὐδοξοτάτην πόλιν διὰ παντὸς νεμόμεθα και δύναται μάλιστα σωφροσύνη ἔμφρων τοῦτ᾿ εἶναι → Just remember, we're a people with a long-standing reputation for freedom, a people held in the highest honor. Slowness to act can be nothing more than a mark of clear-headed self-control (Spartan King Archidamus)
Latin > English (Lewis & Short)
incorpŏrĕus: a, um, adj. 2. in-corpus,
I incorporeal (post-class.): corpusne sit vox an incorporeum: hoc enim vocabulum quidam finxerunt proinde quod Graece dicitur ἀσώματον,> Gell. 5, 15, 1; Macr. S. 7, 15.
Latin > French (Gaffiot 2016)
incorpŏrĕus, a, um, immatériel, incorporel : Gell. 5, 15, 1 ; Macr. Sat. 7, 15.
Latin > German (Georges)
in-corporeus, a, um, unkörperlich, körperlos (Ggstz. corporeus), Gell., Macr. u. Eccl.