burials

listen to the pronunciation of burials
İngilizce - Türkçe

burials teriminin İngilizce Türkçe sözlükte anlamı

burial
gömme
burial
defin
burial
(Askeri) TEDFİN, GÖMME: Bknz. "emergency burial; group burial, trench burial". Ayrıca bakınız: "graves registration"
burial
gömü
burial
burial service cenaze töreni
burial
(Tıp) Gömme, ölü gömme
burial
kabristan
burial
{i} toprağa verme
burial
{i} cenaze töreni

En son ne zaman bir cenaze törenindeydin? - When was the last time you were at a burial ceremony?

burial
burial ground mezarlık
İngilizce - İngilizce
plural of burial
burial
The act of burying; interment
burial
{n} a funeral, the act of burying
Burial
interment
Burial
sepelition
burial
Placing of a dead body in an underground chamber - earth burial- interment
burial
the ritual placing of a corpse in a grave
burial
{i} act of burying, act of placing a corpse in the ground; ceremony which accompanies interment; grave
burial
concealing something under the ground
burial
A grave; a tomb; a place of sepulture
burial
the act of putting a dead body into the ground, or the ceremony connected with this
burial
A burial is the act or ceremony of putting a dead body into a grave in the ground. The priest prepared the body for burial He can have a decent burial. Ritual disposal of human remains. The practice is often intended to facilitate the deceased's entry into the afterworld. Grave burial dates back at least 125,000 years. Types of graves range from trenches to large burial mounds to great stone tombs such as pyramids. Caves have also long been used for the dead e.g., in ancient Hebrew burials, the sepulchral caves (rock temples) of western India and Sri Lanka, and the Dogon cliff burial sites. Water burial, such as occurred among the Vikings, has also been common. Cremation and the scattering of ashes on water is widely practiced, especially in Asia; in India the remains of the deceased are thrown into the sacred Ganges River. Some peoples (American Indian groups, Parsis, etc.) employ exposure to the elements to dispose of their dead. Among many peoples, the first burial is followed by a second, after an interval that often coincides with the duration of bodily decomposition. This reflects a concept of death as slow passage from the society of the living to that of the dead. Jewish custom requires speedy burial; a prayer known as the Kaddish is recited at the graveside, and a gravestone is normally erected a year after burial. Christian burials are often preceded by a wake, a "watch" held over the deceased's body and sometimes accompanied by festivity. Bodies of Muslims are laid on their right side and facing Mecca
burial
(Gr Taphe; Sl Pogrebeniye) The act of interment of the dead body of one of the faithful in consecrated ground, according to the appropriate Orthodox rites and service of burial (Nekrosimos) The Church may deny an Orthodox burial to those who have committed a mortal sin such as blasphemy, suicide, denial of faith, or acceptance of cremation
burial
The act of burying; depositing a dead body in the earth, in a tomb or vault, or in the water, usually with attendant ceremonies; sepulture; interment
burials