sarcophaguses

listen to the pronunciation of sarcophaguses
English - Turkish

Definition of sarcophaguses in English Turkish dictionary

sarcophagus
{i} lahit

Lahit içinde bir sürü altın vardı. - There was lots of gold inside the sarcophagus.

sarcophagus
{ç} sar.coph.a.gi (sarkaf'ıgi)/--es (sarkaf'ıgısız)
sarcophagus
(isim) lahit
English - English
Plural may also be spelled sarcophagi
sarcophagus
a stone coffin or a chest-like tomb
sarcophagus
{i} coffin made of stone
sarcophagus
a wood or stone container for a coffin
sarcophagus
It is otherwise called lapis Assius, or Assian stone, and is said to have been found at Assos, a city of Lycia
sarcophagus
The cement and steel structure that encases the destroyed reactor at the power station in Chernobyl, Ukraine
sarcophagus
A stone coffin
sarcophagus
A sarcophagus is a large decorative container in which a dead body was placed in ancient times. an Egyptian sarcophagus. sarcophagi a decorated stone box for a dead body, used in ancient times
sarcophagus
(plural: sarcophagi) A stone container that usually housed the coffin and mummy The surface was often inscribed with texts to assist the deceased in the journey through the underworld One often finds the word sarcophagi being applied to the coffin within
sarcophagus
A stone container encasing one or more coffins (derived from a Greek word for "flesh-eating")
sarcophagus
A stone coffin that is either rectangular or human-shaped The word means "flesh-eater" in Greek
sarcophagus
a coffin made of stone
sarcophagus
From the Greek meaning "flesh eater " A stone (usually limestone) coffin
sarcophagus
A large stone coffin usually decorated with sculpture and/or inscriptions The term is derived from two Greek words meaning flesh and eating, which are applied to a kind of limestone in ancient Greece, since the stone was said to turn flesh to dust
sarcophagus
container for a corpse or mummy; the term originally referred to a large stone receptacle that held one or more smaller, wooden coffins but was later applied to any coffin, whether made of wood, stone, gold, silver, or some other material
sarcophagus
A container or coffin used to hold the mummy of an ancient Egyptian
sarcophagus
A coffin or chest-shaped tomb of the kind of stone described above; hence, any stone coffin
sarcophagus
A stone coffin, often inscribed or decorated with sculpture
sarcophagus
a stone coffin (usually bearing sculpture or inscriptions)
sarcophagus
Early sarcophagi were made of limestone, a flesh-eating stone which when carved in the shape of a coffin quickly disposed of the corpse so that the monument could be used for another family member Modern sarcophagi are made of granite or other fasting stone
sarcophagus
Coffin usually made of stone or wood, essential element of Egyptian funerary cult and burials
sarcophagus
A species of limestone used among the Greeks for making coffins, which was so called because it consumed within a few weeks the flesh of bodies deposited in it
sarcophagus
A stone shaped like a sarcophagus and placed by a grave as a memorial
sarcophaguses

    Pronunciation

    Etymology

    [ sär-'kä-f&-g& ] (noun.) 1619. Latin sarcophagus limestone used for coffins, from Greek sarkophagos, literally, flesh-eating stone, from sark- sarc- + phagein to eat; more at BAKSHEESH.
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